Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s

Soviet child education in the late 1960s toned down former early Soviet pedagogy goals to mobilize children in the present and encourage their participation in or contribution to revolution, five-year plans or war. Rather than rebel or engage in active conflict, Soviet children of ’68 were encourage...

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Main Author: Birgitte Beck Pristed
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE) 2018-05-01
Series:Strenae
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/1878
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author Birgitte Beck Pristed
author_facet Birgitte Beck Pristed
author_sort Birgitte Beck Pristed
collection DOAJ
description Soviet child education in the late 1960s toned down former early Soviet pedagogy goals to mobilize children in the present and encourage their participation in or contribution to revolution, five-year plans or war. Rather than rebel or engage in active conflict, Soviet children of ’68 were encouraged to study representations of revolutionary activism from other times in historical fiction and accounts about the 1917 Revolution and World War II, or elsewhere, be it from the third world or outer space as imagined in adventure novels. Following a short introduction to the period and a brief explanation of significant Soviet symbolic notions of the child, the article analyses the question of rebellion versus adherence in two contrasting examples of Soviet illustrated children’s books: Marta Fomina’s conformist story Independent People (Samostoiatel’nye liudi) from 1969, and Stanislav Rassadin and Benedikt Sarnov’s non-conformist In the Land of Literary Heroes (V strane literaturnykh geroev) from 1979, based on a series of radio programmes for children launched in 1970. Despite the apparent uniformity of the centrally controlled Soviet school syllabus and educational programme of the late 1960s, these two works exemplify the different and contradictory attitudes to children’s behaviour, phantasy and revolutionary potential that young readers and listeners could encounter in children’s books.
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language fra
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publisher Association Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE)
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spelling doaj-art-a527faf87d214bae8e59b69831118af22024-12-09T15:54:01ZfraAssociation Française de Recherche sur les Livres et les Objets Culturels de l’Enfance (AFRELOCE)Strenae2109-90812018-05-011310.4000/strenae.1878Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970sBirgitte Beck PristedSoviet child education in the late 1960s toned down former early Soviet pedagogy goals to mobilize children in the present and encourage their participation in or contribution to revolution, five-year plans or war. Rather than rebel or engage in active conflict, Soviet children of ’68 were encouraged to study representations of revolutionary activism from other times in historical fiction and accounts about the 1917 Revolution and World War II, or elsewhere, be it from the third world or outer space as imagined in adventure novels. Following a short introduction to the period and a brief explanation of significant Soviet symbolic notions of the child, the article analyses the question of rebellion versus adherence in two contrasting examples of Soviet illustrated children’s books: Marta Fomina’s conformist story Independent People (Samostoiatel’nye liudi) from 1969, and Stanislav Rassadin and Benedikt Sarnov’s non-conformist In the Land of Literary Heroes (V strane literaturnykh geroev) from 1979, based on a series of radio programmes for children launched in 1970. Despite the apparent uniformity of the centrally controlled Soviet school syllabus and educational programme of the late 1960s, these two works exemplify the different and contradictory attitudes to children’s behaviour, phantasy and revolutionary potential that young readers and listeners could encounter in children’s books.https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/1878children’s literaturechildren’s radioeducationcommunism
spellingShingle Birgitte Beck Pristed
Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
Strenae
children’s literature
children’s radio
education
communism
title Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
title_full Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
title_fullStr Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
title_full_unstemmed Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
title_short Revolution Elsewhere: Soviet Conformist and Non-Conformist Children’s Books of the 1960s and 1970s
title_sort revolution elsewhere soviet conformist and non conformist children s books of the 1960s and 1970s
topic children’s literature
children’s radio
education
communism
url https://journals.openedition.org/strenae/1878
work_keys_str_mv AT birgittebeckpristed revolutionelsewheresovietconformistandnonconformistchildrensbooksofthe1960sand1970s