Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy films to satirical theatre, from caricature to court speeches, and from Stalin's own writings to bawdy folk songs, humour pervaded the popular culture of the USSR. Until now, conventional wisdom has held that humour was a hallmark of the subversive, but in State Laughter Dobrenko and Jonsson-Skradol do away with that notion. Instead, tracing the development of official humour, satire, and comedy from the revolution through to the 1950s, they explore how and why laughter was a core component of the survival of the Soviet regime. Grounded in Soviet intellectual and cultural history, State Laughter offers the first comprehensive analysis of sta...
This dissertation argues that the massive Soviet socialization project, one that re-arranged people’...
The special (double) issue of "Russian Literature" is entitled “Totalitarian Laughter: Images – Soun...
Some characteristic examples of early Soviet chastushki, satirical folk verses which were propagated...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
The Stalinist reign of terror was not all gloom and darkness. Much of it was, or aimed to be, entert...
Throughout its history, socialist mass culture actively employed satire, humor, and comedy to foster...
The function of proverbs and catchphrases of the Stalinist period is discussed to reveal how laughte...
The review article discusses three important new books focused on the topic of official Soviet comed...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
This paper by the guest editors serves as an introduction to the present special issue of Russian Li...
Political Humor Under Stalin is an anthology of jokes, wisecracks, and satire from the Soviet 1930s ...
The relevance of laughter as coercion and even as a mechanism of intimidation and control is discuss...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
The paper analyzes the genesis of modern political humor and determines its position in the system o...
This dissertation argues that the massive Soviet socialization project, one that re-arranged people’...
The special (double) issue of "Russian Literature" is entitled “Totalitarian Laughter: Images – Soun...
Some characteristic examples of early Soviet chastushki, satirical folk verses which were propagated...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
The Stalinist reign of terror was not all gloom and darkness. Much of it was, or aimed to be, entert...
Throughout its history, socialist mass culture actively employed satire, humor, and comedy to foster...
The function of proverbs and catchphrases of the Stalinist period is discussed to reveal how laughte...
The review article discusses three important new books focused on the topic of official Soviet comed...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
This paper by the guest editors serves as an introduction to the present special issue of Russian Li...
Political Humor Under Stalin is an anthology of jokes, wisecracks, and satire from the Soviet 1930s ...
The relevance of laughter as coercion and even as a mechanism of intimidation and control is discuss...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
The paper analyzes the genesis of modern political humor and determines its position in the system o...
This dissertation argues that the massive Soviet socialization project, one that re-arranged people’...
The special (double) issue of "Russian Literature" is entitled “Totalitarian Laughter: Images – Soun...
Some characteristic examples of early Soviet chastushki, satirical folk verses which were propagated...