Memories of Terror or Terrorizing Memories? Terror, Trauma and Survival in Soviet Culture of the Thaw
Author: Jones, Polly
Source: The Slavonic and East European Review, Volume 86, Number 2, 1 April 2008 , pp. 346-371(26)
Publisher: Modern Humanities Research Association
Abstract:
This article analyses the cultural politics of memory in the late Thaw, during the period when Soviet literature confronted the Terror and other difficult episodes from the Stalinist past most fully. Using published literature and a variety of archival sources, the article focuses on the different understandings of traumatic memory that emerged in party political discourse, literary criticism and literary works themselves after the public de-Stalinization of the 22nd Party Congress in 1961. While emphasizing the contested meanings of trauma and memory in the period, the article argues that pressure from party authorities and editing and censorship practices ultimately led Soviet literature of the period to narrate the overcoming of trauma and to advocate an orientation to the future rather than to the Stalinist past.Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: The UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies
Publication date: 2008-04-01
- The Review is the oldest British journal in the field, having been in existence since 1922. Edited and managed by the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, it covers not only the modern and medieval languages and literatures of the Slavonic and East European area, but also history, culture, and political studies.
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: History , Literature , Language & Linguistics
- By this author: Jones, Polly

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