search for books and compare prices
cover image
Stage Fright: Politics and the Performing Arts in Late Imperial Russia
Price
Store
Arrives
Preparing
Shipping

Jump quickly to results on these stores:

The price is the lowest for any condition, which may be new or used; other conditions may also be available.
Jump down to see edition details for: Hardcover | Paperback
Bibliographic Detail
Publisher Pennsylvania State Univ Pr
Publication date January 4, 2013
Binding Paperback
Book category Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13 9780271058788
ISBN-10 0271058781
Dimensions 0.75 by 5.75 by 8.75 in.
Weight 0.90 lbs.
Original list price $30.95
Other format details university press
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description:

In June 1920, assessing the international significance of the revolutionary era that had brought him to power in Russia, Vladimir Lenin adopted a theatrical idiom for one of its most important events, the Revolution of 1905. “Without the ‘dress rehearsal’ of 1905,” he wrote, “the victory of the October Revolution in 1917 would have been impossible.” According to Lenin’s statement, political anatomy borrowed in a teleological sense from the performing arts.

This book explores an inversion of Lenin’s statement. Rather than question how politics took after the performing arts, Paul du Quenoy assesses how culture responded to power in late imperial Russia. Exploring the impact of this period’s rapid transformation and endemic turmoil on the performing arts, he examines opera, ballet, concerts, and “serious” drama while not overlooking newer artistic forms thriving at the time, such as “popular” theater, operetta, cabaret, satirical revues, pleasure garden entertainments, and film. He also analyzes how participants in the Russian Empire’s cultural life articulated social and political views.

Du Quenoy proposes that performing arts culture in late imperial Russia—traditionally assumed to be heavily affected by and responsive to contemporary politics—was often apathetic and even hostile to involvement in political struggles. Stage Fright offers a similar refutation of the view that the late imperial Russian government was a cultural censor prefiguring Soviet control of the arts. Through a clear picture of the relationship between culture and power, this study presents late imperial Russia as a modernizing polity with a vigorous civil society capable of weathering the profound changes of the twentieth century rather than lurching toward an “inevitable” disaster of revolution and civil war.



Editions
Hardcover
Book cover for 9780271034676
 
from Pennsylvania State Univ Pr (June 30, 2009)
9780271034676 | details & prices | 290 pages | 6.25 × 9.00 × 1.00 in. | 1.25 lbs | List price $72.95
Paperback
Book cover for 9780139370205 Book cover for 9780271058788
 
The price comparison is for this edition
from Pennsylvania State Univ Pr (January 4, 2013)
9780271058788 | details & prices | 5.75 × 8.75 × 0.75 in. | 0.90 lbs | List price $30.95
About: In June 1920, assessing the international significance of the revolutionary era that had brought him to power in Russia, Vladimir Lenin adopted a theatrical idiom for one of its most important events, the Revolution of 1905.
With George E. Whitehouse | from Prentice Hall (January 1, 1986); titled "Understanding the New Technologies of the Mass Media"

Pricing is shown for items sent to or within the U.S., excluding shipping and tax. Please consult the store to determine exact fees. No warranties are made express or implied about the accuracy, timeliness, merit, or value of the information provided. Information subject to change without notice. isbn.nu is not a bookseller, just an information source.