Russian Science Fiction Literature and Cinema
A Critical Reader
Herausgeber: Banerjee, Anindita
Russian Science Fiction Literature and Cinema
A Critical Reader
Herausgeber: Banerjee, Anindita
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This critical reader aims to provide precisely such a resource for students, scholars, and the merely curious who wish to delve deeper into landmarks of the genre, discover innumerable lesser-known gems in the process, and understand why science fiction came to play such a crucial role in Russian society, politics, technology, and culture for more than a century.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Mark LipovetskyPostmodern Crises71,99 €
- Julia TrubikhinaThe Translator's Doubts88,99 €
- Victor Zhivov"e;Tsar and God"e; and Other Essays in Russian Cultural Semiotics109,99 €
- Zora Neale HurstonYou Don't Know Us Negroes and Other Essays15,30 €
- Donald DavieSlavic Excursions37,99 €
- Zora Neale HurstonYou Don't Know Us Negroes and Other Essays21,99 €
- Julia ListengartenRussian Tragifarce121,99 €
-
-
-
This critical reader aims to provide precisely such a resource for students, scholars, and the merely curious who wish to delve deeper into landmarks of the genre, discover innumerable lesser-known gems in the process, and understand why science fiction came to play such a crucial role in Russian society, politics, technology, and culture for more than a century.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Academic Studies Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 735g
- ISBN-13: 9781618117229
- ISBN-10: 161811722X
- Artikelnr.: 49227381
- Verlag: Academic Studies Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 735g
- ISBN-13: 9781618117229
- ISBN-10: 161811722X
- Artikelnr.: 49227381
Banerjee is an Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and a Faculty Fellow at the Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future at Cornell University. She is the author of "We Modern People: Science Fiction and the Making of Russian Modernity" (Wesleyan University Press, 2013), winner of the Science Fiction and Technoculture Studies Book Prize.
INTRODUCTION Anindita Banerjee. A Possible Strangeness: Reading Russian Science Fiction on the Page and the Screen I. FROM UTOPIAN TRADITIONS TO REVOLUTIONARY DREAMS Darko Suvin. The Utopian Tradition of Russian Science Fiction Mark B. Adams. Red Star: Another Look at Aleksandr Bogdanov Anindita Banerjee. Generating Power Asif A. Siddiqi. Imagining the Cosmos: Utopians, Mystics, and the Popular Culture of Spaceflight in Revolutionary Russia II. RUSSIA
S ROARING TWENTIES Dominic Esler. Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context Eliot Borenstein. The Plural Self: Zamjatin
s We and the Logic of Synecdoche Andrew J. Horton. Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov
s Aelita Yvonne Howell. Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov
s Journey into the Heart of Dogness III. FROM STALIN TO SPUTNIK AND BEYOND Michael G. Smith. Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics Lynn Barker and Robert Skotak. Klushantsev: Russiäs Wizard of Fantastika Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr. Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys
Science Fiction, 1963
72 Stephen Dalton. Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker IV. FUTURES AT THE END OF UTOPIA Elana Gomel. Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia Vlad Strukov. The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov
s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy Aleksandr Chantsev. The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s
S ROARING TWENTIES Dominic Esler. Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context Eliot Borenstein. The Plural Self: Zamjatin
s We and the Logic of Synecdoche Andrew J. Horton. Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov
s Aelita Yvonne Howell. Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov
s Journey into the Heart of Dogness III. FROM STALIN TO SPUTNIK AND BEYOND Michael G. Smith. Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics Lynn Barker and Robert Skotak. Klushantsev: Russiäs Wizard of Fantastika Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr. Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys
Science Fiction, 1963
72 Stephen Dalton. Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker IV. FUTURES AT THE END OF UTOPIA Elana Gomel. Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia Vlad Strukov. The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov
s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy Aleksandr Chantsev. The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s
INTRODUCTION Anindita Banerjee. A Possible Strangeness: Reading Russian Science Fiction on the Page and the Screen I. FROM UTOPIAN TRADITIONS TO REVOLUTIONARY DREAMS Darko Suvin. The Utopian Tradition of Russian Science Fiction Mark B. Adams. Red Star: Another Look at Aleksandr Bogdanov Anindita Banerjee. Generating Power Asif A. Siddiqi. Imagining the Cosmos: Utopians, Mystics, and the Popular Culture of Spaceflight in Revolutionary Russia II. RUSSIA
S ROARING TWENTIES Dominic Esler. Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context Eliot Borenstein. The Plural Self: Zamjatin
s We and the Logic of Synecdoche Andrew J. Horton. Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov
s Aelita Yvonne Howell. Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov
s Journey into the Heart of Dogness III. FROM STALIN TO SPUTNIK AND BEYOND Michael G. Smith. Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics Lynn Barker and Robert Skotak. Klushantsev: Russiäs Wizard of Fantastika Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr. Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys
Science Fiction, 1963
72 Stephen Dalton. Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker IV. FUTURES AT THE END OF UTOPIA Elana Gomel. Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia Vlad Strukov. The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov
s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy Aleksandr Chantsev. The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s
S ROARING TWENTIES Dominic Esler. Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context Eliot Borenstein. The Plural Self: Zamjatin
s We and the Logic of Synecdoche Andrew J. Horton. Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov
s Aelita Yvonne Howell. Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov
s Journey into the Heart of Dogness III. FROM STALIN TO SPUTNIK AND BEYOND Michael G. Smith. Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics Lynn Barker and Robert Skotak. Klushantsev: Russiäs Wizard of Fantastika Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr. Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys
Science Fiction, 1963
72 Stephen Dalton. Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker IV. FUTURES AT THE END OF UTOPIA Elana Gomel. Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia Vlad Strukov. The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov
s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy Aleksandr Chantsev. The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s