In the Soviet Union, literary journals were ubiquitous. Citizens read these so-called thick journals on crowded buses and debated the most recent issue with colleagues at work or friends at the kitchen table. Writers competed for spots in the most prestigious periodicals and formed communities around editorial offices that operated in a complex relationship with censorship and Party authorities. Significant resources were allocated to the design and production of these monthlies, with press runs in the hundreds of thousands and even millions at their peak.
Subscribing to Sovietdom offers a comprehensive study of the socialist literary journal as a unique cultural form – from the early revolutionary years to the end of socialism – within the Soviet Union and abroad. Synthesizing visual and literary analysis of the periodicals, archive-based literary history, and computational approaches to the study of bibliographical data, the book reveals the medium in its role as literary institution, visual object of everyday life, and cultural event.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
A Note on Transliteration, Translation, and References to Periodicals
Introduction: The Socialist Literary Journal
Part One: The Domestic Life of the Journal
1. Through Thick and Thin: Emergence of the Soviet Literary Journal in the 1920s
2. From War to Thaw: Decline and Revival of the Soviet Journal
3. The Social Life of Journals: Periodical Kinship Networks in the 1960s
Part Two: The Transnational Life of the Journal
4. Transnational Circulations: International Literature between Moscow, Prague, and Berlin
5. The Socialist Journal without Socialism? The Case of the Third Wave Emigration
Conclusion: The Death and Afterlife of the Socialist Literary Journal
Appendix to Chapter 3: The Soviet Journals Reconnected Data
Notes
Bibliography
Periodicals
Archives
Published Sources
Index
Height:229
Width:152
Spine:25
Weight:1.00