Turgenev’s Anniversaries in the Memorial Culture of the Soviet Era
https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-109-123
Abstract
The memory of the past is one of the supporting structures of society. Contributing orientation in time and space to society, the memory acts as a connection between the present and the future. With the help of memory, society maintains its identity. What society remembers or forgets is the cultural core of its values and meanings. Being the representation of the past, versatile and selective memory is undergone to constant reorganization in the society in accordance with the demands of the present. The Soviet project, aimed at forming of a new society and a person, offered also its own project of the past, created its culture of memory. Ideas about the past changed along with the change of the Soviet present and the vision of its future. An important component of the culture of memory are the commemorations. Anniversaries of signifcant events and historical fgures allow to organize the work of the past in the present, to enter them into the current cultural space. The anniversary reading of the classic authors of Russian literature in the Soviet period was associated with the idea of mastering the cultural heritage of the past by the working people. The methods and forms of their memorialization, aimed at mass perception and appropriation, corresponded to the heroic matrix, which played the main role in the institutionalization of the Soviet collective whole. This matrix, based on the class-party principle, had two successive profles: revolutionary-international and nationalpatriotic. In the Soviet period there were several important dates in memory of Ivan Turgenev. Honorings of the writer complied with a certain canon. Turgenev’s works were primarily understood from the point of view of their social signifcance, in the context of both the Turgenev era and the Soviet era. Its multivalent potential was mainly considered from two aspects: the service to the revolution and the service toRussia.
About the Author
Irina KoznovaRussian Federation
D.Sc. in History, Leading Research Fellow at the Department of Philosophy of Culture
References
1. Adamovich A., Uvarova G. (1932) Turgenev as a Playwright. The 50th Anniversary of the Death. Rabochiy i teatr. 1932. No. 26 (in Russian).
2. Assmann A. (2014) Long Shadow of the Past: Memorial Culture and Historical Politics (Russian translation: Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie Publ., 2014).
3. Assman J. (2004) Cultural Memory: The Writing, Past Memory and Political Identity in the High Cultures of Antiquity (Russian translation: Moscow: Jazyki slavjanskoj kul’tury Publ., 2004).
4. Basmanov A. (1983) The Terms of Russia. Ogonek. 1983. No. 37 (in Russian).
5. Bernstein I.A. (1951) Turgenev as a Critic of the Bourgeois West. Literatura v Shkole. 1951. No. 4, pp. 23-30 (in Russian).
6. Egolin A. (1943) A Great Writer-patriot. Komsomolskaya Pravda. 1943. November 11. No. 180 (in Russian).
7. Eremin I. (1968) Son of Time. Komsomolskaya Pravda. 1968, November 5. No. 260 (in Russian).
8. Etkind A. (2004) A Hundred Years of Revolution: Anniversary of Beginning and the Beginning of the End. Otechestvennye Zapiski. 2004. No. 5. Available at: http://www.strana-oz.ru/2004/5/stoletnyaya-revolyuciya-yubiley-nachala-i-nachalo-konca (in Russian).
9. Fedoseev G. (1933) About Turgenev’s Realism. To 50 Anniversary of His Literary Activity. Oktyabr. 1933. No. 10 (in Russian).
10. Koni A.F. (1923) Thoughtful Contemplator. Literaturny ezhenedelnik. 1923. No. 36 (in Russian).
11. Kubikov I. (1923) I.S. Turgenev. 40 Years from the Date of Death. Gorod i Derevnya. 1923. No. 5, pp. 37-41 (in Russian).
12. Lunacharsky A. (1961) Lecture on Turgenev. Russkaya Literatura. 1961. No. 4 (in Russian).
13. Malakhov S. (1933) Turgenev’s Creative Legacy. Literaturny Sovremennik. 1933. No. 9 (in Russian).
14. Mitskevich S. (1934) Turgenev and Revolutionary Populism. Literaturny Kritik. 1934. No. 9 (in Russian).
15. N. K. (1923) Turgenev and We. Sibirskie Ogni. 1923. Nos. 5-6 (in Russian).
16. Nora P. (2005) The Global Celebration Memory. Memory About War 60 Years Later: Russia, Germany, Europe. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie Publ. (in Russian).
17. Pigarev K. (1938) Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev. Ogonek. 1938. No. 32/33 (in Russian).
18. Polyakov A.S. (1919) Speech at the Solemn Meeting in Memory of the Centenary of the Birth of I.S. Turgenev in Alexandrinsky Theater on November 10, 1918. Biryuch Petrogradskikh Gosudarstvennykh Teatrov. 1919. Nos. 13-14 (in Russian).
19. Sakulin P.N. (1918) On the Brink of Two Cultures. I.S. Turgenev. Moscow: Mir (in Russian).
20. Sergovancev N. (1968) Ivan Turgenev. 1818–1968. Ogonek. 1968. No. 46 (in Russian).
21. Utevsky L.S. (1923) The Death Of Turgenev. 1883–1923. Petrograd: Ateney (in Russian).
22. Veksler I. (1933) Turgenev and Political Struggle 60 years. Literaturny Sovremennik. 1933. No. 9 (in Russian).
Review
For citations:
Koznova I. Turgenev’s Anniversaries in the Memorial Culture of the Soviet Era. Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences. 2018;(7):109-123. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-109-123