Toxic Voices: The Villain from Early Soviet Literature to Socialist Realism
ISBN: 9780810166356
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Northwestern University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Russian literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism; Socialist realism in literature; Villains in literature;

Satire and the fantastic, vital literary genres in the 1920s, are often thought to have fallen victim to the official adoption of socialist realism. Eric Laursen contends that these subversive genres did not just vanish or move underground. Instead, key strategies of each survive to sustain the villain of socialist realism. Laursen argues that the judgment of satire and the hesitation associated with the fantastic produce a narrative obsession with controlling the villain's influence. In identifying a crucial connection between the questioning, subversive literature of the 1920s and the socialist realists, Laursen produces an insightful revision of Soviet literary history.


Eric Laursen is an associate professor in the Department of Languages and Literature at the University of Utah.

hidden image for function call