“充满当下时间的过去”:激进运动如何维持过去感?

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY KRITIKA-EXPLORATIONS IN RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN HISTORY Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1353/kri.2023.a910987
Andy Willimott
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Various 19th-century national movements embraced narratives proclaiming and explaining their existence, often retrospectively projecting their values back to a time armorial. In 1917, the Bolsheviks confidently proclaimed their newness, heralded a red dawn, and insisted on a new way of life. But the past mattered to the Bolsheviks, too. Far from disregarding the events and developments that preceded them, as Marxists they understood history as a linear, progressive process. They were deeply conscious of their place in \"the march of history.\" More than that, the past could be meaningful to the Bolsheviks—a place where example and purpose were to be found. After all, as Marxists, they believed that the past was composed of manifest \"universal laws\" that could both explain and help unlock the course of history (Bergman, viii). Not so much rooted in a fixed sense of \"time armorial,\" the forces of history seemed very much alive in the present [End Page 901] for the Bolsheviks. Or as Walter Benjamin observed, theirs was \"a past charged with the time of the now.\"1 Understanding the past as having an active and evolving importance to the Bolsheviks—as opposed to a redundant, unchanging, or even purely subservient role—is crucial to explaining the formative underpinnings of 1917 and the Soviet Union.2 It has not always been thus. The long-dominant totalitarian school of thought presumed that ideology was fixed, permanent, and impervious to evolving circumstances. The meanings found in the past were deemed largely irrelevant next to the power of a \"founding idea.\"3 In recent years, however, a growing array of scholars have sought to examine the Soviet relationship to the past, influenced by the burgeoning field of memory studies, building on Pierre Nora's formative assessment of rituals and symbols as sites of memory, Hayden White's pronouncements on our collective desire for narrative construction and storytelling in historical writing, and Henry Steele Commager's focus on presentism and the search for a \"usable past,\" as well as Eric Hobsbawn and Terence Ranger's notion of \"invented traditions.\"4 The last particularly resonated with a field tending to focus on the top-down production of propaganda. Most accounts in the field have concerned themselves with the immediate (Soviet) past. Nina Tumarkin led the way with her study on the memory of the Great Patriotic War within the Soviet Union.5 Where Tumarkin led, others have followed. Crucially, David Brandenberger's popularising of the phrase \"National Bolshevism\" has served as an example of how a Russocentric past was incorporated into Soviet propaganda.6 Lisa Kirschenbaum, focusing on the legacies of the Leningrad Siege, assiduously [End Page 902] began the process of revealing how citizens engaged with official narratives on the Soviet past.7 Most recently, Jonathan Brundstedt's The Soviet Myth of World War II has sought nuance, challenging those who claim Soviet internationalism and its legacies were simply jettisoned in 1941.8 Jeremy Hicks's latest book analyzes the continued symbolic, ritualistic, and even indeterminate significance of the Victory Banner famously raised atop the Reichstag in 1945—tracing this image through film, documentaries, television, and even into current-day advertising and video games.9 Frederick C. Corney's Telling October, in contrast, turns attention to the historic framing of 1917, examining the documents and inner workings of the Commission on the History of the October Revolution and the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks...","PeriodicalId":45639,"journal":{"name":"KRITIKA-EXPLORATIONS IN RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN HISTORY","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"\\\"A Past Charged with the Time of the Now\\\": How Do Radical Movements Sustain a Sense of Past?\",\"authors\":\"Andy Willimott\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/kri.2023.a910987\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\\"A Past Charged with the Time of the Now\\\"How Do Radical Movements Sustain a Sense of Past? Andy Willimott (bio) Jay Bergman, The French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics, Political Thought, and Culture. 543 pp. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. ISBN-13 978-0198842705. $130.00. David Brandenberger and Mikhail Zelenov, eds., Stalin's Master Narrative: A Critical Edition of the History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks): Short Course. 744 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019. ISBN-13 978-0300155365. $72.00. How do radical movements sustain a sense of past even as they boldly declare their newness? With the Reformation a whole historiography of medieval dissent was forged by 16th-century Protestants, all vying to find a sense of origin in a virtuous past. Various 19th-century national movements embraced narratives proclaiming and explaining their existence, often retrospectively projecting their values back to a time armorial. In 1917, the Bolsheviks confidently proclaimed their newness, heralded a red dawn, and insisted on a new way of life. But the past mattered to the Bolsheviks, too. Far from disregarding the events and developments that preceded them, as Marxists they understood history as a linear, progressive process. They were deeply conscious of their place in \\\"the march of history.\\\" More than that, the past could be meaningful to the Bolsheviks—a place where example and purpose were to be found. After all, as Marxists, they believed that the past was composed of manifest \\\"universal laws\\\" that could both explain and help unlock the course of history (Bergman, viii). Not so much rooted in a fixed sense of \\\"time armorial,\\\" the forces of history seemed very much alive in the present [End Page 901] for the Bolsheviks. Or as Walter Benjamin observed, theirs was \\\"a past charged with the time of the now.\\\"1 Understanding the past as having an active and evolving importance to the Bolsheviks—as opposed to a redundant, unchanging, or even purely subservient role—is crucial to explaining the formative underpinnings of 1917 and the Soviet Union.2 It has not always been thus. The long-dominant totalitarian school of thought presumed that ideology was fixed, permanent, and impervious to evolving circumstances. The meanings found in the past were deemed largely irrelevant next to the power of a \\\"founding idea.\\\"3 In recent years, however, a growing array of scholars have sought to examine the Soviet relationship to the past, influenced by the burgeoning field of memory studies, building on Pierre Nora's formative assessment of rituals and symbols as sites of memory, Hayden White's pronouncements on our collective desire for narrative construction and storytelling in historical writing, and Henry Steele Commager's focus on presentism and the search for a \\\"usable past,\\\" as well as Eric Hobsbawn and Terence Ranger's notion of \\\"invented traditions.\\\"4 The last particularly resonated with a field tending to focus on the top-down production of propaganda. Most accounts in the field have concerned themselves with the immediate (Soviet) past. Nina Tumarkin led the way with her study on the memory of the Great Patriotic War within the Soviet Union.5 Where Tumarkin led, others have followed. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

“充满当下时间的过去”激进运动如何维持过去的感觉?安迪·威利莫特(传记)杰伊·伯格曼,在俄罗斯和苏联政治,政治思想和文化的法国革命传统。543页。牛津:牛津大学出版社,2019。ISBN-13 978 - 0198842705。130.00美元。David Brandenberger和Mikhail Zelenov编。,斯大林的主叙事:苏联共产党(布尔什维克)历史批判版:短期课程。744页。纽黑文:耶鲁大学出版社,2019。ISBN-13 978 - 0300155365。72.00美元。激进运动如何在大胆宣称自己是新颖性的同时保持对过去的感觉?随着宗教改革,16世纪的新教徒形成了一套完整的中世纪异议史学,他们都在竞相寻找一种源于道德高尚的过去的感觉。19世纪的各种民族运动都采用了宣称和解释其存在的叙事,通常将其价值观追溯到一个时代的徽章。1917年,布尔什维克自信地宣告他们的新生,预示着红色的黎明,并坚持一种新的生活方式。但对布尔什维克来说,过去也很重要。作为马克思主义者,他们并没有忽视在他们之前发生的事件和发展,而是把历史理解为一个线性的、进步的过程。他们深深意识到自己在“历史进程”中的地位。更重要的是,过去对布尔什维克来说可能是有意义的——一个可以找到榜样和目标的地方。毕竟,作为马克思主义者,他们相信过去是由明显的“普遍规律”组成的,这些规律既可以解释历史的进程,也可以帮助解开历史的进程(伯格曼,第八章)。对布尔什维克来说,历史的力量不是根植于固定的“时间徽章”,而是在现在似乎非常活跃。或者正如沃尔特·本雅明(Walter Benjamin)所说,他们的“过去充满了当下的时间”。将过去理解为对布尔什维克具有积极和不断发展的重要性,而不是多余的、不变的,甚至纯粹是屈从的角色,这对于解释1917年和苏联的形成基础至关重要。长期占据统治地位的极权主义思想流派认为,意识形态是固定的、永久的,不受环境变化的影响。过去发现的含义被认为与“创始理念”的力量相比,在很大程度上是无关紧要的。然而,近年来,越来越多的学者在新兴的记忆研究领域的影响下,以皮埃尔·诺拉(Pierre Nora)对作为记忆场所的仪式和符号的形成性评估、海登·怀特(Hayden White)关于我们在历史写作中对叙事构建和讲故事的集体愿望的声明,以及亨利·斯蒂尔·科马格(Henry Steele Commager)对现在主义和寻找“可用的过去”的关注为基础,试图研究苏联与过去的关系。以及埃里克·霍布斯鲍恩和特伦斯·兰杰的“发明的传统”概念。最后一个特别引起了一个倾向于关注自上而下的宣传生产的领域的共鸣。这一领域的大多数报道都涉及到最近(苏联)的过去。尼娜·图马金(Nina Tumarkin)对苏联卫国战争记忆的研究引领了这一潮流。至关重要的是,大卫·布兰登伯格对“民族布尔什维主义”一词的普及,是一个以俄罗斯为中心的过去如何被纳入苏联宣传的例子Lisa Kirschenbaum专注于列宁格勒围城战的遗留问题,她孜孜不倦地开始揭示公民是如何参与关于苏联过去的官方叙述的最近,乔纳森·布伦德斯泰特的《二战的苏联神话》寻找了细微的差别,挑战了那些声称苏联国际主义及其遗产在1941年就被抛弃的人。杰里米·希克斯的新书分析了1945年在德国国会大厦(Reichstag)上高举的胜利旗帜的持续象征意义、仪式意义,甚至是不确定的意义——通过电影、纪录片、电视,甚至是当今的广告和电子游戏追踪了这一形象相比之下,弗雷德里克·c·科尼的《讲述十月》将注意力转向了1917年的历史框架,研究了十月革命历史委员会和俄罗斯共产党(布尔什维克……
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"A Past Charged with the Time of the Now": How Do Radical Movements Sustain a Sense of Past?
"A Past Charged with the Time of the Now"How Do Radical Movements Sustain a Sense of Past? Andy Willimott (bio) Jay Bergman, The French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics, Political Thought, and Culture. 543 pp. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. ISBN-13 978-0198842705. $130.00. David Brandenberger and Mikhail Zelenov, eds., Stalin's Master Narrative: A Critical Edition of the History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks): Short Course. 744 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019. ISBN-13 978-0300155365. $72.00. How do radical movements sustain a sense of past even as they boldly declare their newness? With the Reformation a whole historiography of medieval dissent was forged by 16th-century Protestants, all vying to find a sense of origin in a virtuous past. Various 19th-century national movements embraced narratives proclaiming and explaining their existence, often retrospectively projecting their values back to a time armorial. In 1917, the Bolsheviks confidently proclaimed their newness, heralded a red dawn, and insisted on a new way of life. But the past mattered to the Bolsheviks, too. Far from disregarding the events and developments that preceded them, as Marxists they understood history as a linear, progressive process. They were deeply conscious of their place in "the march of history." More than that, the past could be meaningful to the Bolsheviks—a place where example and purpose were to be found. After all, as Marxists, they believed that the past was composed of manifest "universal laws" that could both explain and help unlock the course of history (Bergman, viii). Not so much rooted in a fixed sense of "time armorial," the forces of history seemed very much alive in the present [End Page 901] for the Bolsheviks. Or as Walter Benjamin observed, theirs was "a past charged with the time of the now."1 Understanding the past as having an active and evolving importance to the Bolsheviks—as opposed to a redundant, unchanging, or even purely subservient role—is crucial to explaining the formative underpinnings of 1917 and the Soviet Union.2 It has not always been thus. The long-dominant totalitarian school of thought presumed that ideology was fixed, permanent, and impervious to evolving circumstances. The meanings found in the past were deemed largely irrelevant next to the power of a "founding idea."3 In recent years, however, a growing array of scholars have sought to examine the Soviet relationship to the past, influenced by the burgeoning field of memory studies, building on Pierre Nora's formative assessment of rituals and symbols as sites of memory, Hayden White's pronouncements on our collective desire for narrative construction and storytelling in historical writing, and Henry Steele Commager's focus on presentism and the search for a "usable past," as well as Eric Hobsbawn and Terence Ranger's notion of "invented traditions."4 The last particularly resonated with a field tending to focus on the top-down production of propaganda. Most accounts in the field have concerned themselves with the immediate (Soviet) past. Nina Tumarkin led the way with her study on the memory of the Great Patriotic War within the Soviet Union.5 Where Tumarkin led, others have followed. Crucially, David Brandenberger's popularising of the phrase "National Bolshevism" has served as an example of how a Russocentric past was incorporated into Soviet propaganda.6 Lisa Kirschenbaum, focusing on the legacies of the Leningrad Siege, assiduously [End Page 902] began the process of revealing how citizens engaged with official narratives on the Soviet past.7 Most recently, Jonathan Brundstedt's The Soviet Myth of World War II has sought nuance, challenging those who claim Soviet internationalism and its legacies were simply jettisoned in 1941.8 Jeremy Hicks's latest book analyzes the continued symbolic, ritualistic, and even indeterminate significance of the Victory Banner famously raised atop the Reichstag in 1945—tracing this image through film, documentaries, television, and even into current-day advertising and video games.9 Frederick C. Corney's Telling October, in contrast, turns attention to the historic framing of 1917, examining the documents and inner workings of the Commission on the History of the October Revolution and the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks...
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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期刊介绍: A leading journal of Russian and Eurasian history and culture, Kritika is dedicated to internationalizing the field and making it relevant to a broad interdisciplinary audience. The journal regularly publishes forums, discussions, and special issues; it regularly translates important works by Russian and European scholars into English; and it publishes in every issue in-depth, lengthy review articles, review essays, and reviews of Russian, Eurasian, and European works that are rarely, if ever, reviewed in North American Russian studies journals.
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