Nietzsche and Soviet Culture
Ally and Adversary
Herausgeber: Rosenthal, Bernice Glatzer
Nietzsche and Soviet Culture
Ally and Adversary
Herausgeber: Rosenthal, Bernice Glatzer
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This pioneering 1994 study documents the extent and diversity of the impact of Nietzschean ideas on Soviet literature and culture.
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This pioneering 1994 study documents the extent and diversity of the impact of Nietzschean ideas on Soviet literature and culture.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 440
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 617g
- ISBN-13: 9780521148320
- ISBN-10: 0521148324
- Artikelnr.: 31194975
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 440
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 617g
- ISBN-13: 9780521148320
- ISBN-10: 0521148324
- Artikelnr.: 31194975
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
List of illustrations; List of contributors; Acknowledgement; List of
abbreviations; Introduction Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal; Part I. Nietzsche
and the Prerevolutionary Roots of Soviet Culture: 1. Nietzsche and the
young Mayakovsky Bengt Jangfeldt; 2. Khlebnikov and Nietzsche: pieces of an
incomplete mosaic Henryk Baran; 3. Apollonianism and Christian art:
Nietzsche's influence on Acmeism Elaine Rusinko; 4. Armchair anarchists and
salon supermen: Russian occultists read Nietzsche Maria Carlson; Part II.
Nietzsche and Soviet Initiatives in the Arts: 5. Nietzschean leaders and
followers in Soviet mass theater, 1917-27 James von Geldern; 6. Revolution
as an aesthetic phenomenon: Nietzschean motifs in the reception of Isaac
Babel (1923-32) Gregory Freidin; 7. Nietzschean implications and superhuman
aspirations in the architectural avant-garde Milka Bliznakov; 8.
Nietzscheanism and the return of Pushkin in twentieth-century Russian
culture (1899-1937) Irina Paperno; Part III. Adaptations of Nietzsche in
Soviet Ideology: 9. Nietzschean motifs in the Komsomol's vanguardism Isabel
A. Tirado; 10. Nietzschean roots of Stalinist culture Mikhail Agursky; 11.
Superman imagery in Soviet photography and photomontage Margarita Tupitsyn;
Part IV: Nietzsche among Disaffected Writers and Thinkers: 12. From beyond
the abyss: Nietzschean myth in Zamiatin's We and Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago
Edith Clowes; 13. Mandelstam, Nietzsche, and the conscious creation of
history Clare Cavanagh; 14. Nietzsche's influence on the non-official
culture of the 1930s Boris Groys; Part V. Nietzsche and the Nationalities:
A Case Study: 15. Nietzsche's influence on Hebrew writers of the Russian
empire Menahem Brinker; Index.
abbreviations; Introduction Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal; Part I. Nietzsche
and the Prerevolutionary Roots of Soviet Culture: 1. Nietzsche and the
young Mayakovsky Bengt Jangfeldt; 2. Khlebnikov and Nietzsche: pieces of an
incomplete mosaic Henryk Baran; 3. Apollonianism and Christian art:
Nietzsche's influence on Acmeism Elaine Rusinko; 4. Armchair anarchists and
salon supermen: Russian occultists read Nietzsche Maria Carlson; Part II.
Nietzsche and Soviet Initiatives in the Arts: 5. Nietzschean leaders and
followers in Soviet mass theater, 1917-27 James von Geldern; 6. Revolution
as an aesthetic phenomenon: Nietzschean motifs in the reception of Isaac
Babel (1923-32) Gregory Freidin; 7. Nietzschean implications and superhuman
aspirations in the architectural avant-garde Milka Bliznakov; 8.
Nietzscheanism and the return of Pushkin in twentieth-century Russian
culture (1899-1937) Irina Paperno; Part III. Adaptations of Nietzsche in
Soviet Ideology: 9. Nietzschean motifs in the Komsomol's vanguardism Isabel
A. Tirado; 10. Nietzschean roots of Stalinist culture Mikhail Agursky; 11.
Superman imagery in Soviet photography and photomontage Margarita Tupitsyn;
Part IV: Nietzsche among Disaffected Writers and Thinkers: 12. From beyond
the abyss: Nietzschean myth in Zamiatin's We and Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago
Edith Clowes; 13. Mandelstam, Nietzsche, and the conscious creation of
history Clare Cavanagh; 14. Nietzsche's influence on the non-official
culture of the 1930s Boris Groys; Part V. Nietzsche and the Nationalities:
A Case Study: 15. Nietzsche's influence on Hebrew writers of the Russian
empire Menahem Brinker; Index.
List of illustrations; List of contributors; Acknowledgement; List of
abbreviations; Introduction Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal; Part I. Nietzsche
and the Prerevolutionary Roots of Soviet Culture: 1. Nietzsche and the
young Mayakovsky Bengt Jangfeldt; 2. Khlebnikov and Nietzsche: pieces of an
incomplete mosaic Henryk Baran; 3. Apollonianism and Christian art:
Nietzsche's influence on Acmeism Elaine Rusinko; 4. Armchair anarchists and
salon supermen: Russian occultists read Nietzsche Maria Carlson; Part II.
Nietzsche and Soviet Initiatives in the Arts: 5. Nietzschean leaders and
followers in Soviet mass theater, 1917-27 James von Geldern; 6. Revolution
as an aesthetic phenomenon: Nietzschean motifs in the reception of Isaac
Babel (1923-32) Gregory Freidin; 7. Nietzschean implications and superhuman
aspirations in the architectural avant-garde Milka Bliznakov; 8.
Nietzscheanism and the return of Pushkin in twentieth-century Russian
culture (1899-1937) Irina Paperno; Part III. Adaptations of Nietzsche in
Soviet Ideology: 9. Nietzschean motifs in the Komsomol's vanguardism Isabel
A. Tirado; 10. Nietzschean roots of Stalinist culture Mikhail Agursky; 11.
Superman imagery in Soviet photography and photomontage Margarita Tupitsyn;
Part IV: Nietzsche among Disaffected Writers and Thinkers: 12. From beyond
the abyss: Nietzschean myth in Zamiatin's We and Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago
Edith Clowes; 13. Mandelstam, Nietzsche, and the conscious creation of
history Clare Cavanagh; 14. Nietzsche's influence on the non-official
culture of the 1930s Boris Groys; Part V. Nietzsche and the Nationalities:
A Case Study: 15. Nietzsche's influence on Hebrew writers of the Russian
empire Menahem Brinker; Index.
abbreviations; Introduction Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal; Part I. Nietzsche
and the Prerevolutionary Roots of Soviet Culture: 1. Nietzsche and the
young Mayakovsky Bengt Jangfeldt; 2. Khlebnikov and Nietzsche: pieces of an
incomplete mosaic Henryk Baran; 3. Apollonianism and Christian art:
Nietzsche's influence on Acmeism Elaine Rusinko; 4. Armchair anarchists and
salon supermen: Russian occultists read Nietzsche Maria Carlson; Part II.
Nietzsche and Soviet Initiatives in the Arts: 5. Nietzschean leaders and
followers in Soviet mass theater, 1917-27 James von Geldern; 6. Revolution
as an aesthetic phenomenon: Nietzschean motifs in the reception of Isaac
Babel (1923-32) Gregory Freidin; 7. Nietzschean implications and superhuman
aspirations in the architectural avant-garde Milka Bliznakov; 8.
Nietzscheanism and the return of Pushkin in twentieth-century Russian
culture (1899-1937) Irina Paperno; Part III. Adaptations of Nietzsche in
Soviet Ideology: 9. Nietzschean motifs in the Komsomol's vanguardism Isabel
A. Tirado; 10. Nietzschean roots of Stalinist culture Mikhail Agursky; 11.
Superman imagery in Soviet photography and photomontage Margarita Tupitsyn;
Part IV: Nietzsche among Disaffected Writers and Thinkers: 12. From beyond
the abyss: Nietzschean myth in Zamiatin's We and Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago
Edith Clowes; 13. Mandelstam, Nietzsche, and the conscious creation of
history Clare Cavanagh; 14. Nietzsche's influence on the non-official
culture of the 1930s Boris Groys; Part V. Nietzsche and the Nationalities:
A Case Study: 15. Nietzsche's influence on Hebrew writers of the Russian
empire Menahem Brinker; Index.