“In the Union, Everyone Should Read”: Reader as an Institution of the Soviet Culture

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Dmitry Tsyganov
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The present review focuses on the third volume of the collective study Reading Russia: A History of Reading in Modern Russia and aims at analyzing the methods of studying reading practices proposed in the aforementioned publication. The articles included in the peer-reviewed volume are studied in detail against the background of previously published scholarly literature on the history of reading, as well as in relation to archival and previously (un)published materials that have so escaped researchers’ attention. The broad historical and literary material shows that the «narratives» proposed in the reviewed volume do not present a full-fledged history of reading practices, but describe only individual disparate reading strategies of typologically different readers. The forms of institutionalization of reading in the USSR that were left out are sometimes much more important in the context of transformations in reading practices than the total collection of the «cases» offered in the volume. At the same time, the case study review offers an opportunity to talk about ‘the reader of the 20th century’ as a special institution of Soviet culture. This is why much of the review presents an attempt to find other principles and strategies of analysis on which the history of reading in the «small twentieth century» can be based. The article offers a sociological portrait of the average reader, whose main features were formed during the Stalinist era and remained unchanged throughout the previous century. These features have existed in the same form for almost a quarter of the present century. The material that has been excluded from the present research can be divided into three groups: facts that characterize the Soviet state of affairs; information about the most important forms of institutionalized reading in the USSR-specific cultural environment; information concerning aesthetic and economic aspects of the book. A detailed commentary on each of these groups is intended to supplement and elaborate on the authors' concept. Along with the analysis of archival documents, we draw on materials from the funds of various public organizations and bodies, as well as periodicals, published memoirs, diaries and other materials available to us.
“在苏联,人人都应该读书”:读者作为苏联文化的一种制度
本文以集体研究《阅读俄罗斯:现代俄罗斯阅读史》的第三卷为研究对象,旨在分析上述出版物中提出的阅读实践研究方法。同行评议卷中包含的文章在先前发表的关于阅读历史的学术文献的背景下进行了详细的研究,以及与档案和以前(未)出版的材料有关的资料,这些资料已经逃过了研究人员的注意。广泛的历史和文学材料表明,在审查卷中提出的“叙事”并没有呈现出完整的阅读实践历史,而只是描述了不同类型的读者的个体不同的阅读策略。在阅读实践转变的背景下,被遗漏的苏联阅读制度化的形式有时比本书中提供的全部“案例”更重要。同时,案例研究综述提供了一个机会来讨论“20世纪的读者”作为苏联文化的一个特殊机构。这就是为什么很多评论都试图找到其他的分析原则和策略,这些原则和策略可以作为“小二十世纪”阅读史的基础。这篇文章提供了一幅普通读者的社会学肖像,他们的主要特征是在斯大林时代形成的,并在上个世纪保持不变。这些特征以同样的形式存在了近四分之一世纪。在本研究中被排除在外的材料可以分为三组:具有苏联事态特征的事实;关于苏联特定文化环境中最重要的制度化阅读形式的信息;关于这本书的美学和经济方面的信息。对每一组的详细评论旨在补充和阐述作者的概念。在对档案文件进行分析的同时,我们还从各种公共组织和机构的基金中提取资料,以及期刊、出版的回忆录、日记和其他我们可以获得的资料。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Slovene-International Journal of Slavic Studies
Slovene-International Journal of Slavic Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
50.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal Slověne = Словѣне is a periodical focusing on the fields of the arts and humanities. In accordance with the standards of humanities periodicals aimed at the development of national philological traditions in a broad cultural and academic context, the Journal Slověne = Словѣне is multilingual but with a focus on papers in English. The Journal Slověne = Словѣне is intended for the exchange of information between Russian scholars and leading universities and research centers throughout the world and for their further professional integration into the international academic community through a shared focus on Slavic studies. The target audience of the journal is Slavic philologists and scholars in related disciplines (historians, cultural anthropologists, sociologists, specialists in comparative and religious studies, etc.) and related fields (Byzantinists, Germanists, Hebraists, Turkologists, Finno-Ugrists, etc.). The periodical has a pronounced interdisciplinary character and publishes papers from the widest linguistic, philological, and historico-cultural range: there are studies of linguistic typology, pragmalinguistics, computer and applied linguistics, etymology, onomastics, epigraphy, ethnolinguistics, dialectology, folkloristics, Biblical studies, history of science, palaeoslavistics, history of Slavic literatures, Slavs in the context of foreign languages, non-Slavic languages and dialects in the Slavic context, and historical linguistics.
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