Proletarian Imagination: Self, Modernity, and the Sacred in Russia, 1910-1925

Couverture
Cornell University Press, 2002 - 335 pages

In fin-de-siècle and early revolutionary Russia, a group of self-educated workers produced a large body of poetry and prose in which they attempted to comprehend their rapidly changing world. Witnesses to wars and revolution, these men and women grappled on paper with the nature of civilization and the imperatives of ethical truth. In a strikingly original approach to Russian culture, Mark D. Steinberg listens to their words, which are little known today. The results of their literary creativity, he finds, were frequently not what the new Soviet order was expecting from its workers, despite its celebration of the notion of a proletarian art.Through insightful readings of a vast fund of lower-class writings, Steinberg shows that the authors focused above all on the uncertain nature and place of the self, the promise and dangers of modernity, and the qualities of the sacred in both their lives and their imaginations. Like their counterparts in the intelligentsia, these worker writers were ambivalent about Marxist ideology's celebration of the city and the factory and even about modern progress itself. Drawing on vast research, Steinberg demonstrates the texts' significance for an understanding of Russian popular mentalities, indeed for the very meaning, philosophically and morally, of these years of crisis and possibility at the end of the old order and the early years of the Soviet regime.

 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
Cultural Revolution The Making of a Plebeian Intelligentsia
21
Knowledges of Self
62
The Proletarian I
102
The Moral Landscape of the Modern City
147
Revolutionary Modernity and Its Discontents
184
6 Feelings of the Sacred
224
Sacred Vision in the Revolution
247
Conclusion
282
Selected Biographical Sketches
287
Selected Bibliography
313
Index
327
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À propos de l'auteur (2002)

Mark D. Steinberg is Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is author of several books, including Moral Communities: The Culture of Class Relations in the Russian Printing Industry, 1867-1907 and Voices of Revolution, 1917, and the coauthor of A History of Russia, 7th edition.

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