This is a well-considered, reader-friendly work.

Choice

From the Introduction, which works both as a who’s who of early twentieth-century Russian theatre and as a crash course in Soviet politics from the revolution through the Thaw, to the Epilogue detailing the Thaw’s legacy of nuanced, mixed-genre drama, Gardiner’s book provides authoritative detail on the direct relationship between theatre and politics and how this affected Soviet culture.

Modern Language Review

The era known as the Thaw (1953-64) was a crucial period in the history of the Soviet Union. It was a time when the legacies of Stalinism began to unravel and when brief moments of liberalisation saw dramatic changes to society. By exploring theatre productions, plays and cultural debates during the Thaw, this book sheds light on a society in flux, in which the cultural norms, values and hierarchies of the previous era were being rethought.

Jesse Gardiner demonstrates that the revival of avant-garde theatre during the Thaw was part of a broader re-engagement with cultural forms that had been banned under Stalin. Plays and productions that had fallen victim to the censor were revived or reinvented, and their authors and directors rehabilitated alongside waves of others who had been repressed during the Stalinist purges. At the same time, new theatre companies and practitioners emerged who reinterpreted the stylized techniques of the avant-garde for a post-war generation. This book argues that the revival of avant-garde theatre was vital in allowing the Soviet public to reimagine its relationship to state power, the West and its own past. It permitted the rethinking of attitudes and prejudices, and led to calls for greater cultural diversity across society. Playwrights, directors and actors began to work in innovative ways, seeking out the theatre of the future by re-engaging with the proscribed forms of the past.

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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements

Introduction
1. Soviet Theatre under Stalin
2. Leningrad in the Shadow of the Other: Akimov at the Lensovet Theatre, 1952-1955
3. Restaging Mayakovsky and Remembering Meyerhold: The Moscow Satire Theatre Productions, 1953-1957
4. Redefining Socialist Realism in the Era of De-Stalinization: Tovstonogov and Okhlopkov Revive the Soviet Classics, 1955-1956
5. New Writers for New Times: Moscow Realism at the Sovremennik Theatre-Studio, 1956-1959
6. The Fairy Tale that Would Not Come True: Staging Evgenii Shvarts, 1960-1963
Epilogue

Notes
Select Bibliography
Index

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A study of the revival of avant-garde theatre during the Khrushchev Thaw (1953-64), exploring some of the most important Soviet theatre productions of the post-Stalin era.
It offers a comprehensive guide to Soviet theatre during the Thaw
The Bloomsbury series of Cultural Histories of Theatre and Performance recognizes that historical knowledge has always been contested and revised. Since the turn of the twenty first century, the transformation of conventional understandings of culture created through new political realities and communication technologies together with paradigm shifts in anthropology, psychology and other cognate fields have challenged established methodologies and ways of thinking about how we do history. The series embraces volumes that take on those challenges while enlarging notions of theatre and performance through the representation of the lived experience of past performance makers and spectators. The series aim is to be both inclusive and expansive, including studies on topics that range temporally and spatially, from the locally-specific to the intercultural and transnational.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350150621
Publisert
2022-12-01
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Methuen Drama
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Jesse Gardiner is Lecturer in Russian at the University of St Andrews, UK.