Telling October: Memory and the Making of the Bolshevik Revolution

Couverture
Cornell University Press, 2004 - 301 pages

All revolutionary regimes seek to legitimize themselves through foundation narratives that, told and retold, become constituent parts of the social fabric, erasing or pushing aside alternative histories. Frederick C. Corney draws on a wide range of sources--archives, published works, films--to explore the potent foundation narrative of Russia's Great October Socialist Revolution. He shows that even as it fought a bloody civil war with the forces that sought to displace it, the Bolshevik regime set about creating a new historical genealogy of which the October Revolution was the only possible culmination.

This new narrative was forged through a complex process that included the sacralization of October through ritualized celebrations, its institutionalization in museums and professional institutes devoted to its study, and ambitious campaigns to persuade the masses that their lives were an inextricable part of this historical process. By the late 1920s, the Bolshevik regime had transformed its representation of what had occurred in 1917 into a new orthodoxy, the October Revolution.

Corney investigates efforts to convey the dramatic essence of 1917 as a Bolshevik story through the increasingly elaborate anniversary celebrations of 1918, 1919, and 1920. He also describes how official commissions during the 1920s sought to institutionalize this new foundation narrative as history and memory. In the book's final chapter, the author assesses the state of the October narrative at its tenth anniversary, paying particular attention to the versions presented in the celebratory films by Eisenstein and Pudovkin. A brief epilogue assesses October's fate in the years since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

 

Table des matières

Writing the Event
1
THE DRAMA OF OCTOBER
13
of Soviets in 1918
19
26
44
20
50
Set Design for Ereinovs Storming of the Winter Palace
76
THE MEMORY OF OCTOBER
98
46
107
The Twentieth Anniversary of 1905
149
Demonstration in Petrograd on the Twentyfifth
157
The Tenth Anniversary of October
175
Lenin at the Finland Station
189
Experiencing October
201
Epilogue
219
194
230
Bibliography
251

Delegates to the Second AllRussian Congress of Archival
115
How Not to Write the History of October
126

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À propos de l'auteur (2004)

Frederick C. Corney is Assistant Professor of History at The College of William & Mary.

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