In 1991 the Soviet Union collapsed along with the utopian
Communist ideal that had played a major role in world politics for
seventy-four years.
This book is about the evolution of Russian anti-utopian literature
in a post-Soviet environment. A guiding question for the present
study has been: What makes us recognize a novel as anti-utopian at
a time when the idea of utopia may appear obsolete? The main part
of the dissertation is comprised of detailed analyses of the novels:
The Slynx (Kys’, 2001) by Tatyana Tolstaya; Babylon/Homo Zapiens
(Generation ‘P’, 1999) by Viktor Pelevin; and Ice Trilogy (Ledianaia
Trilogiia, 2002-2005) by Vladimir Sorokin. The further development
of the genre is subsequently discussed on the basis of seven novels
published during the past decade.
The dissertation shows how the analysed novels problematize
various forms of societal discourse, and how these discourses
work as mutations of utopia. Prominent among these are historical
discourses – phantoms of the past, which reflect the increasing
importance of historical narratives in public political debates in
present-day Russia.
ArbetstitelPhantoms of a Future Past : A Study of Contemporary Russian Anti-Utopian Novels
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Publiceringsdatum2016-03-02 00:00:00
FörfattareMattias Ågren
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