Stage Fright (Politics and the Performing Arts in Late Imperial Russia)
معرفی کتاب «Stage Fright (Politics and the Performing Arts in Late Imperial Russia)» نوشتهٔ Paul Du Quenoy; NetLibrary, Inc، منتشرشده توسط نشر Pennsylvania State University Press در سال 2009. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
'Explores the relationship between culture and power in Imperial Russia. Argues that Russia's performing arts were part of a vibrant public culture that was usually ambivalent or hostile to the tumultuous political events of the revolutionary era'--Provided by publisher. In June 1920, assessing the international significance of the revolutionary era that had brought him to power in Russia, Vladimir Lenin adopted a theatrical idiom for one of its most important events, the Revolution of 1905. Without the dress rehearsal of 1905, he wrote, the victory of the October Revolution in 1917 would have been impossible. According to Lenins statement, political anatomy borrowed in a teleological sense from the performing arts. This book explores an inversion of Lenins statement. Rather than question how politics took after the performing arts, Paul du Quenoy assesses how culture responded to power in late imperial Russia. Exploring the impact of this periods rapid transformation and endemic turmoil on the performing arts, he examines opera, ballet, concerts, and serious drama while not overlooking newer artistic forms thriving at the time, such as popular theater, operetta, cabaret, satirical revues, pleasure garden entertainments, and film. He also analyzes how participants in the Russian Empires cultural life articulated social and political views. Du Quenoy proposes that performing arts culture in late imperial Russiatraditionally assumed to be heavily affected by and responsive to contemporary politicswas often apathetic and even hostile to involvement in political struggles. Stage Fright offers a similar refutation of the view that the late imperial Russian government was a cultural censor prefiguring Soviet control of the arts. Through a clear picture of the relationship between culture and power, this study presents late imperial Russia as a modernizing polity with a vigorous civil society capable of weathering the profound changes of the twentieth century rather than lurching toward an inevitable disaster of revolution and civil war. "An aspiration to novelty" : contours of the performing arts in late Imperial russia "Such a risky time" : arts institutions and the challenge of politics "Politics are death" : Imperial theater performers "Our theater will not strike!" : private and popular theater performers "You dare not make sport of our nerves!" : the audiences "A new bayreuth will save no one" : Russian modernism and its discontents "Art must be apolitical" : a conclusion.
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