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Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, ...
~
Reese, Kevin Mitchell.
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Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, the Strugatskii brothers, and the New Soviet Man.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, the Strugatskii brothers, and the New Soviet Man./
作者:
Reese, Kevin Mitchell.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2010,
面頁冊數:
247 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 72-01, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International72-01A.
標題:
Modern literature. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3408830
ISBN:
9781124053929
Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, the Strugatskii brothers, and the New Soviet Man.
Reese, Kevin Mitchell.
Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, the Strugatskii brothers, and the New Soviet Man.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2010 - 247 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 72-01, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2010.
This study seeks to "transcribe" the dialogue with various futures that is integral to the works of two Soviet writers: the poet Vladimir Maiakovskii and the co-author consisting of the brothers Arkadii and Boris Strugatskii. Dialogue with a variety of possible futures is a noteworthy feature of much science fiction. However, since Soviet Marxism dictated that the general terms of the future were known and inevitable, the contents of such a dialogue in Soviet science fiction are of special interest, particularly where they diverge from portrayals of utopia. The New Soviet Man-the "mythical" being who was understood to be the inhabitant of any Soviet future-should be viewed as a constant participant in this dialogue. A concrete definition of the New Soviet Man is elusive: this being is usually described by opposition to the given present human, conditionally labeled in this study as the "Old Soviet Man." The New Soviet Man is, by definition, the superior of the Old Soviet Man physically, mentally, and morally. Considering one author from the early Soviet period and one from the post-war period enables this study to cover much of the Soviet era. In fact, since science fiction can be conceptualized as a mapping not only from the present to a future, but also back to the present, this study will be an account of certain moments of the Soviet "present" of the twentieth century. The discussion focuses on three central topics, each of which is a permutation of the set of themes surrounding the New Soviet Man: the machines of the future, the humans of the future, and the intersection between the two. These topics are the respective subjects of chapters one, three, and two. The conclusion considers these questions within a wider context, with specific reference to the influence of H. G. Wells. Ultimately, the study aims to draw conclusions about the writers' attitudes regarding the New Soviet Man, and, more generally, about the idea that the human being can and should be "improved.".
ISBN: 9781124053929Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122750
Modern literature.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Mayakovsky, Vladimir
Immortals are not men: Maiakovskii, the Strugatskii brothers, and the New Soviet Man.
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This study seeks to "transcribe" the dialogue with various futures that is integral to the works of two Soviet writers: the poet Vladimir Maiakovskii and the co-author consisting of the brothers Arkadii and Boris Strugatskii. Dialogue with a variety of possible futures is a noteworthy feature of much science fiction. However, since Soviet Marxism dictated that the general terms of the future were known and inevitable, the contents of such a dialogue in Soviet science fiction are of special interest, particularly where they diverge from portrayals of utopia. The New Soviet Man-the "mythical" being who was understood to be the inhabitant of any Soviet future-should be viewed as a constant participant in this dialogue. A concrete definition of the New Soviet Man is elusive: this being is usually described by opposition to the given present human, conditionally labeled in this study as the "Old Soviet Man." The New Soviet Man is, by definition, the superior of the Old Soviet Man physically, mentally, and morally. Considering one author from the early Soviet period and one from the post-war period enables this study to cover much of the Soviet era. In fact, since science fiction can be conceptualized as a mapping not only from the present to a future, but also back to the present, this study will be an account of certain moments of the Soviet "present" of the twentieth century. The discussion focuses on three central topics, each of which is a permutation of the set of themes surrounding the New Soviet Man: the machines of the future, the humans of the future, and the intersection between the two. These topics are the respective subjects of chapters one, three, and two. The conclusion considers these questions within a wider context, with specific reference to the influence of H. G. Wells. Ultimately, the study aims to draw conclusions about the writers' attitudes regarding the New Soviet Man, and, more generally, about the idea that the human being can and should be "improved.".
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