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Palgrave Macmillan

Energy Culture

Work, Power, and Waste in Russia and the Soviet Union

  • Book
  • © 2023

Overview

  • Considers energy as a political resource, philosophical concept, and a subject of cultural representation
  • Takes into account the influential role literature and aesthetic forms have played in Russia’s history
  • Demonstrates the key role Russia has played in energy history alongside Western powers

Part of the book series: Literatures, Cultures, and the Environment (LCE)

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Table of contents (13 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This volume investigates energy as a shaping force in Russian and Soviet literature, visual culture, and social practice. Chronologically arranged chapters explain how nineteenth-century ideas about energy informed realist novels and paintings; how the poetics of energy defined pre-Revolutionary and Stalinist utopianism; and how fossil fuels, electricity, and nuclear fission generated distinct aesthetic features in Imperial Russian, Soviet, and post-Soviet literature, cinema, and landscape. The volume’s concentration on Russia responds to a clear need to understand the role the country plays in social, political, and economic processes endangering life on Earth today. The cultural dimension of Russia’s efforts at energy dominance deserves increased scholarly attention not only in its own right, but also because it directly affects global energy policy. As the contributors to this volume argue, the nationally inflected cultural myths that underlie human engagements with energyhave been highly consequential in the Anthropocene.

shortlisted for AATSEEL's Best Edited Multi-Author Scholarly Volume for 2023

 

Reviews

“Shortlisted for AATSEEL's Best Edited Multi-Author Scholarly Volume for 2023” (AATSEEL, aatseel.org, 2023)

“The chapters make for an energizing read and present ideas and approaches that will inspire anyone interested in energy humanities, or literary and cultural history of Rus- sia and the Soviet Union. Rather than reproducing ecocritical approaches that developed from other (largely Anglophone) aesthetic and cultural traditions, this book confidently suggests that study of Russian and Soviet energy culture might lead to modifications in existing approaches.” (Lily Scott, Slavic & East European Journal, Vol.67 (4), 2023)

“The volume’s thirteen chapters are arranged chronologically and draw from multiple disciplines. One of its strengths is the capacious definition of 'energy culture.' ... Given the prominence of Russia and the former Soviet states on the global and energy-industrial stage, Energy Culture is a valuable primer on the energy conflicts, infrastructures, and cultures that will continue to radiate from this part of the world.” (Isabel Lane, ISLE - Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, Vol.30 (4), 2023)

Editors and Affiliations

  • University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, USA

    Jillian Porter

  • New York University, New York, USA

    Maya Vinokour

About the editors

Jillian Porter is Associate Professor in the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Colorado Boulder, USA. She is the author of Economies of Feeling: Russian Literature under Nicholas I (2017) and has published essays on money, commodities, and the queue in Russian and Soviet literature and cinema. 

Maya Vinokour is Assistant Professor in the Department of Russian and Slavic Studies at New York University, USA. She studies Stalinist labor culture, late-Soviet science fiction, and post-Soviet media.



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