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(Ebook) Imagining the unimaginable : World War, modern art, & the politics of public culture in Russia, 1914-1917 by Cohen, Aaron J ISBN 9780803215474, 9780803217355, 0803215479, 0803217358

  • SKU: EBN-5271686
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Instant download (eBook) Imagining the unimaginable : World War, modern art, & the politics of public culture in Russia, 1914-1917 after payment.
Authors:Cohen, Aaron J
Pages:232 pages.
Year:2008
Editon:First
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Language:english
File Size:2.73 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780803215474, 9780803217355, 0803215479, 0803217358
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Imagining the unimaginable : World War, modern art, & the politics of public culture in Russia, 1914-1917 by Cohen, Aaron J ISBN 9780803215474, 9780803217355, 0803215479, 0803217358

As World War I shaped and molded European culture to an unprecedented degree, it also had a profound influence on the politics and aesthetics of early-twentieth-century Russian culture. In this provocative and fascinating work, Aaron J. Cohen shows how World War I changed Russian culture and especially Russian art. A wartime public culture destabilized conventional patterns in cultural politics and aesthetics and fostered a new artistic world by integrating the iconoclastic avant-garde into the art establishment and mass culture. This new wartime culture helped give birth to nonobjective abstraction (including Kazimir Malevich’s famous Black Square), which revolutionized modern aesthetics. Of the new institutions, new public behaviors, and new cultural forms that emerged from this artistic engagement with war, some continued, others were reinterpreted, and still others were destroyed during the revolutionary period. Imagining the Unimaginable deftly reveals the experiences of artists and developments in mass culture and in the press against the backdrop of the broader trends in Russian politics, economics, and social life from the mid-nineteenth century to the revolution. After 1914, avant-garde artists began to imagine many things that had once seemed unimaginable. As Marc Chagall later remarked, “The war was another plastic work that totally absorbed us, which reformed our forms, destroyed the lines, and gave a new look to the universe.”
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