Charms of the Cynical Reason
The Trickster's Transformation in Soviet and Post-Soviet Culture
Author(s)
Lipovetsky, Mark
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Number
104927Language
EnglishAbstract
The impetus for Charms of the Cynical Reason is the phenomenal and little-explored popularity of various tricksters flourishing in official and unofficial Soviet culture, as well as in the post-Soviet era. Mark Lipovetsky interprets this puzzling phenomenon through analysis of the most remarkable and fascinating literary and cinematic images of soviet and post-Soviet tricksters, including such “cultural idioms” as Ostap Bender, Buratino, Vasilii Tyorkin, Stierlitz, and others. Soviet tricksters present survival in a cynical, contradictory, and inadequate world, not as a necessity, but as a field for creativity, play, and freedom. Through an analysis of the representation of tricksters in Soviet and post-Soviet culture, Lipovetsky attempts to draw a virtual map of the soviet and post-Soviet cynical reason: to identify its symbols, discourses, and contradictions, and by these means its historical development from the 1920s to the 2000s.
Keywords
Literature; Literary Criticism; Soviet studies; Postmodern Russia; Russian cinemaDOI
10.2307/j.ctt21h4wjtISBN
9781618118509OCN
1135853852Publisher
Academic Studies PressPublisher website
https://www.academicstudiespress.com/Publication date and place
2010-12-01Series
Cultural Revolutions: Russia in the Twentieth Century,Classification
Literary studies: general