The Modern Period

The Modern Period

Literature and Revolution
Course Number: 
155
Course Type or Level: 
Instructor: 
Harsha Ram
Days: 
Tu/Th
Time: 
12:30-2
Semester: 
Location: 
259 Dwinell

Also listed as Slavic 131:1

The 100th anniversary of the Russian revolution seems an ideal moment to go back and examine the history and literature of revolutionary Russia. This was an era of violent upheaval, material destitution and radical projections of social renewal and human transformation. We will be tracing the arc of the first revolutionary decade, from the revolutionary upsurge of 1917 and the Civil War of 1918-1921, which saw the ultimate consolidation of Soviet power, to the early and often contradictory formulations of Soviet culture arising over the course of the 1920s. Our course will focus primarily on the relationship between literature and revolution, a vital question given the importance paid to written culture by Bolsheviks and non-Bolsheviks alike. How did the writer bear witness to the first socialist revolution in history? Is revolution an event or a process, and how might it be narrated? Is literature a mirror to history or can it also serve actively to project and shape change? How did the principal literary genres – poetry, drama, the short story, the novel – as well as cinema serve the goal of imagining the revolution? How did political and literary theory animate the debates of the time? Was there room for satire and laughter in a socialist society? If the first half of the 20th century can be deemed the era of utopia and dystopia, what does Russian literature teach us about the hopes and failures of revolutionary transformation? Writers and thinkers we will be reading include John Reed and Vladimir Lenin, Vladimir Mayakovsky and Velimir Khlebnikov, Isaak Babel and Boris Pilnyak, Viktor Shklovsky and Leon Trotsky, Mikhail Zoshchenko and Yuri Olesha, Evgeny Zamyatin, Mikhail Bulgakov and Andrei Platonov.  In addition to material provided online (on bCourses), you will be required to purchase the following books at Follett Student Bookstore 2470/2480 Bancroft Avenue

BOOKS TO BE PURCHASED 

John Reed, Ten Days That Shook the World (Penguin Classics) 978-0-14-144212-9

Vladimir Mayakovsky, Selected Poems (Northwestern World Classics) 978-0-8101-2907-8

Isaak Babel, Red Cavalry (Norton) 978-0-393-32423-5

Boris Pilnyak, The Naked Year (Overlook Press) 978-1-4683-0639-2

Yuri Olesha, Envy (New York Review Books1-59017-086-5

Evgeny Zamyatin, We (Penguin) 0-14-018585-2

Andrey Platonov, Soul: And Other Stories (New York Review Books978-1-59017-254-4