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9780299344443 Academic Inspection Copy

Charlottengrad

Russian Culture in Weimar Berlin
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As many as half a million Russians lived in Germany in the 1920s, most of them in Berlin, clustered in and around the Charlottenburg neighborhood to such a degree that it became known as "Charlottengrad." Traditionally, the Russian EmigrE community has been understood as one of exiles aligned with Imperial Russia and hostile to the Bolshevik Revolution and the Soviet government that followed. However, Charlottengrad hosted a full range of personal and political positions vis-A-vis the Soviet project, from enthusiastic loyalty to questioning ambivalence and pessimistic alienation. By closely examining the intellectual output of Charlottengrad, Roman Utkin explores how community members balanced their sense of Russianness with their position in a modern Western city charged with artistic, philosophical, and sexual freedom. He highlights how Russian authors abroad engaged with Weimar-era cultural energies while sustaining a distinctly Russian perspective on modernist expression, and follows queer Russian artists and writers who, with their German counterparts, charted a continuous evolution in political and cultural attitudes toward both the Weimar and Soviet states. Utkin provides insight into the exile community in Berlin, which was one of the earliest to face and collectively process the peculiarly modern problem of statelessness. Charlottengrad analyzes the cultural praxis of "Russia Abroad" in a dynamic Berlin, investigating how these Russian EmigrEs and exiles navigated what it meant to be Russian when the Russia they knew no longer existed.
Roman Utkin is an assistant professor of Russian, East European, and Eurasian studies at Wesleyan University.
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration and Translation Introduction 1. Unsentimental Journeys: Berlin as Trial Emigration 2. Guides to Berlin: Exiles, EmigrEs, and the Left 3. Performing Exile: The Golden Cockerel at the Berlin State Opera 4. Nabokov, Berlin, and the Future of Russian Literature 5. Queering the Russian Diaspora Conclusion Appendix: The Russian Poets Club Meeting Minutes, Berlin, 1928 Notes Bibliography Index
"Illuminating. . . . [An] ambitious and wide-ranging study. . . . Utkin provides a fresh and multifaceted view of a diverse community that has hitherto been treated for the most part homogenously."-Times Literary Supplement "With its rich, independently interested case studies, Utkin's homage to the 'colorful patchwork' of EmigrE life displays the hidden complexity and disorder of Russian Berlin."-Modern Language Review "A groundbreaking book-an innovative, compelling, and important contribution to the study of Russian and Russophone cultural life during the interwar era. This is a bold and necessary corrective to narratives concerning global Russian culture in the postrevolutionary period."- Kevin M. F. Platt, University of Pennsylvania
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