Media and Communication in the Soviet Union (1917–1953): General Perspectives

دانلود کتاب Media and Communication in the Soviet Union (1917–1953): General Perspectives

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کتاب رسانه ها و ارتباطات در اتحاد جماهیر شوروی (1917-1953): دیدگاه های عمومی نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب رسانه ها و ارتباطات در اتحاد جماهیر شوروی (1917-1953): دیدگاه های عمومی بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Media and Communication in the Soviet Union (1917–1953): General Perspectives

نام کتاب : Media and Communication in the Soviet Union (1917–1953): General Perspectives
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : رسانه ها و ارتباطات در اتحاد جماهیر شوروی (1917-1953): دیدگاه های عمومی
سری :
نویسندگان : , ,
ناشر : Palgrave Macmillan
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 442
ISBN (شابک) : 3030883663 , 9783030883669
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 7 مگابایت



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Preface
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Abbreviations
List of Figures
List of Tables
Chapter 1: Soviet Communication and Soviet Society (1917–1953): Alignments and Tensions
Overview
Soviet Society in Communication: Political Conditions and Interactional Consequences
Communication in Soviet Society: Adaptations, Changes and Repercussions
References
Part I: Channels
Chapter 2: Visual Channels (1): Posters and Fine Art
Posters
Fine Art
References
Chapter 3: Visual Channels (2): Cityscapes
Talking to the Uninitiated
A More Planned Approach
Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: Visual Channels (3): Cartography
Introduction
The Development of Soviet Cartography
Mapping the Revolution: The Cartographic Communication of Spatial Ideology
Cartographic Secrecy in Post-revolutionary Russia
References
Published Sources
Archival Sources
Chapter 5: Auditory Channels: Crowing Roosters and Wailing Sirens
Human Vocal Organs, Musical Instruments, and Records
Soundscapes: A General View
Russia Between Rural and Industrial Soundscapes: A Comparative Glance
Sound Design and the Recording Rituals: Constructing Soviet Soundscape
Noise with a Soul: Soundscapes of Soviet Cinema
Conclusion
References
Filmography
Chapter 6: Tactile Channels: Brotherly Kisses, Handshakes, and Flogging in a Bathhouse
Proximity as a Social Identifier
Touch and Proxemics
The Politics of Brotherly Kissing in Russia and the Soviet Union
Rubbing the Back in a Bathhouse from Old to Stalinist Russia
Conclusion
References
Part II: Media
Chapter 7: Public Body (1): Popular Assemblies
Popular Assembly as a Special Interactional Setting
Birth of Popular Assembly from the Spirit of Revolution
Modifications of Popular Assembly in Mature Stalinism
Conclusion
References
Chapter 8: Public Body (2): Mass Festivals
1917–1927
1927–1941
1941–1953
Epilog: Mass Festivals Under Khrushchev and Brezhnev
References
Chapter 9: Public Body (3): State Celebrations and Street Festivities
Introduction
Variety of Soviet Mass Assemblies
A Chronology of Mass Assemblies
1918–1920
1921–1926
1927–1933
1934–1941
Mass Assemblies Theorized by the Contemporaries
Mass Assemblies in the View of the Modern Scholarship
Conclusion
References
Chapter 10: Private Body: Kitchen Gossip and Bedroom Whispers
Romantic Love
Family
Conclusion
References
Chapter 11: Public Print (1): Books and Periodicals
The Civil War
The New Economic Policy
The Stalin Revolution
References
Chapter 12: Public Print (2): Coins and Bank Notes
Money as a Medium of Communication: Some General Remarks
Soviet Money: A Concise Prehistory
Soviet Money as a Medium of Communication: A Standard of Value
Soviet Money as a Medium of Communication: A Store of Value
Soviet Money as a Medium of Communication: A Means of Exchange
Soviet Money as a Medium of Communication: A Propaganda Tool
References
Chapter 13: Private Handwriting (1): Diaries
The Invention of the Soviet Self
Public Faces in Private Narratives
Private Handwriting and the Totality of the Public Sphere
Searching for Truth
References
Chapter 14: Private Handwriting (2): Personal Letters
Institutionalization, Official Procedures, and Legal Framework
Addressees and the Classification of Letters
Authors
Letters to Newspapers
Personification of Power, Reciprocity, and Exchange
Structure of the Letters
Conclusion
References
Chapter 15: Private Handwriting (3): Denunciations
Promoting the New Practice
Behind the Scene
The Meaning of Soviet Denunciation
References
Chapter 16: Private/Public Handwriting: Self-reports
Self-Report as “Samootchet”
Self-Report as Self-Criticism
Self-Report as Self-Education: Gender Roles
References
Chapter 17: Electrical Signalling (1): Telegraph
Imperial Heritage
The Telegraph, a Tool of Territorial Conquest
Telegraphic Hierarchies
The Persistence of the Telegraph
Conclusion
References
Chapter 18: Electrical Signalling (2): Telephone
References
Chapter 19: Electrical Signalling (3): Film
The Scissors of “Ideology” and “Commerce”: Seeking the Art Form Intelligible for the Millions
Sound on: The Voice of State Power
Screened Reality: Not Image but Formula
Conclusion
References
Filmography
Chapter 20: Electrical Signalling (4): Radio
Defining Radio and Radio Communication
How Soviet Union Failed to Become a Part of the Global Village
Promises and Pitfalls of Broadcasting at a Distance
“Wheezing Stalin,” or the Quality of the Sound Reception in Early Soviet Radio
Radio During Stalin’s Industrialization Campaign
Conclusion
References
Part III: Boundaries and Flows
Chapter 21: Boundaries (1): “Nomenklatura” Versus the Rest
Nomenklatura as Code of Administration
Nomenklatura as Code of Privilege
The Code of Administration and Regime Discourse
Conclusion
References
Chapter 22: Boundaries (2): “Comrades” vs. Deviants
Introduction
The Bolshevik Idea of the Revolution
The Concept of the Proletariat as an Example of Circular Thinking
The Tenth Party Congress: How the Party Saw Itself in the Early 1920s
The Party: Recruitment, Purges, and the Dynamics of Membership
From Circular Thinking to the Great Terror
The Party as a Deviant: Trotsky, Riutin, and the Dissidents
References
Chapter 23: Top-down Verbal Messaging: Textbooks
Introduction
The New Pedagogy and Tensions between Center and Periphery: In Search of the New Soviet Textbook
The Centralization of the State Control: In Search of the New Bolshevik Textbook
Conclusion
References
Chapter 24: Bottom-up Non-verbal Messaging: Applause
Introduction
Applause as a Messaging Device: Organization, Functions, Limitations, and Ambiguities
Applause in Russia Before 1917: Some Pre-history
Applause as a Messaging Device in Soviet Politics from Lenin to Stalin
Never-ending Applause from Below: Exhausted Followers
Never-ending Applause from Above: Infuriated Leader
References
Chapter 25: Top-down Extraction of Bottom-up Messages: Surveillance
References
Index




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