| Price:
$24.95
Paperback: 328 pages
Publisher: Northwestern University Press (October
18, 2005)
Language: English
ISBN: 0810120321
Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.4 x 0.9 inches

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Book Description
A compendium of folkloric, literary, and critical texts that show
how the Russian fairy tale acquired political and historical meanings
during the Soviet era
We were born to make fairy tales come true. As one of Stalinism's
more memorable slogans, this one suggests that the fairy tale figured
in Soviet culture as far more than a category of children's literature.
How much more-and how cannily Russian fairy tales reflect and interpret
Soviet culture, especially in its utopian ambitions-becomes clear
for the first time in Politicizing Magic, a compendium of folkloric,
literary, and critical texts that demonstrate the degree to which
ancient fairy-tale fantasies acquired political and historical meanings
during the catastrophic twentieth century.
Introducing Western readers to the most representative texts of
Russian folkloric and literary tales, this book documents a rich
exploration of this colorful genre through all periods of Soviet
literary production (1920-1985) by authors with varied political
and aesthetic allegiances. Here are traditional Russian folkloric
tales and transformations of these tales that, adopting the didacticism
of Soviet ideology, proved significant for the official discourse
of Socialist Realism. Here, too, are narratives produced during
the same era that use the fairy-tale paradigm as a deconstructive
device aimed at the very underpinnings of the Soviet system. The
editors' introductory essays acquaint readers with the fairy-tale
paradigm and the permutations it underwent within the utopian dream
of Soviet culture, deftly placing each-from traditional folklore
to fairy tales of Socialist Realism, to real-life events recast
as fairy tales for ironic effect-in its literary, historical, and
political context.
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