Revolutionary Dreams: Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution

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Oxford University Press, Nov 14, 1991 - History - 344 pages
The revolutionary ideals of equality, communal living, proletarian morality, and technology worship, rooted in Russian utopianism, generated a range of social experiments which found expression, in the first decade of the Russian revolution, in festival, symbol, science fiction, city planning, and the arts. In this study, historian Richard Stites offers a vivid portrayal of revolutionary life and the cultural factors--myth, ritual, cult, and symbol--that sustained it, and describes the principal forms of utopian thinking and experimental impulse. Analyzing the inevitable clash between the authoritarian elements in the Bolshevik's vision and the libertarian behavior and aspirations of large segments of the population, Stites interprets the pathos of utopian fantasy as the key to the emotional force of the Bolshevik revolution which gave way in the early 1930s to bureaucratic state centralism and a theology of Stalinism.
 

Contents

List of Illustrations
Social Daydreaming Before the Revolution
A New World
Revolutionary Iconoclasm
Festivals of the People
Godless Religion
The Republic of Equals
Man the Machine
Futurology and Science Fiction
City and Building
The Communal Movement
War on the Dreamers
Lunar Economics and Social Revolution
A Note on Sources and Abbreviations
Index
Copyright

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