03277nam a22003973i 4500001001200000003000700012005001700019007001500036008004100051020003600092020001800128040002400146100002300170245007200193250001200265264005400277264001200331300003400343336002600377337003200403338003600435500006300471505158100534520034702115650001502462650002302477651001602500653002202516653002702538655001602565655002202581700002402603700002402627776012302651856010502774EBC32680279MiAaPQ20260518135130.0cr cnu||||||||260513s2026 xx o ||||0 eng d a9781526182135q(electronic bk.) z9781526182128 aMiAaPQbengcMiAaPQ1 aArbuthnot, Mollie.10aSoviet Materialities :bSocialist Things, Environments and Affects. a1st ed. 1aManchester :bManchester University Press,c2026. 4c©2026. a1 online resource (388 pages) aTextbtxt2rdacontent aComputermedienbc2rdamedia aOnline Resourcebcr2rdacarrier aE-Book-ProQuest / Fernzugriff nach Registrierung möglich0 aFront Matter -- Contents -- List of colour plates -- List of figures -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Introduction -- Part I: Land, Water, Ecologies -- 'And stones speak!': mapping, mosaics, and the Soviet materiality of wonder -- Moving matters: Turksib and its orientations -- Seas of material residues, or diving into the wayward archive of the Moscow Canal -- Embodied nature: landscape as architecture during the Thaw -- Reflection: The materialism of Soviet stones, liquids, and landscapes -- Part II: Words, Matter, Mind -- The livingness of texts in Vladimir Sorokin and Dmitrii Prigov's literature and performance art -- Kruchenykh's explosive texts: elemental anarchy in the gelatine press and the gelatine bomb -- Formalists -- The vanishing brains of the Soviet Pantheon and the vexing question of the materiality of Soviet subjects -- Reflection: Wordy things, thingly signs, and other points of transfer -- Part III: Things in Time -- A building containing the universe: atheism and material heritage in late Soviet Tashkent -- Things of life in times of extremes: survival materialities during the Soviet famines in Ukraine -- How did material culture matter in the Khrushchev-era USSR? Everyday aesthetics and the socialist culture of things -- Reprocessing and resurfacing reality: reworking the everyday and the avant-garde in the artistic laboratory of Irina Nakhova -- Reflection: One does not kiss a monument of ancient art: Russian Orthodox icons and the abducted materiality of modernity -- Select bibliography -- Index -- Plates. aSoviet materialities rethinks Soviet history and culture through the lens of materiality, exploring how humans and objects co-shaped identity, ideology, and social life. This interdisciplinary volume bridges Soviet-era thought with theoretical insights from New Materialism, offering a groundbreaking approach to the study of the Soviet past. 0aSachkultur 0aGesellschaftsleben aSowjetunion aSoviet philology. aSocialism and culture. aFernzugriff 4aElectronic books.1 aBonin, Christianna.1 aFerrari, Gabriella.08iPrint version:aArbuthnot, MollietSoviet MaterialitiesdManchester : Manchester University Press,c2026z978152618212840uhttps://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/maxweberstiftung-ebooks/detail.action?docID=32680279zVolltext