TY - BOOK AU - Clark,Katerina TI - Moscow, the Fourth Rome: Stalinism, Cosmopolitanism, and the Evolution of Soviet Culture, 1931-1941 SN - 9780674062894 AV - DK601 U1 - 947/.310842 PY - 2011/// CY - Cambridge PB - Harvard University Press KW - Stalin, Joseph,-1878-1953-Influence KW - Cosmopolitanism-Russia (Federation)-Moscow-History KW - Popular culture-Russia (Federation)-Moscow-History KW - Communism-Russia (Federation)-Moscow-History KW - Social change-Russia (Federation)-Moscow-History KW - Social change-Soviet Union-History KW - Moscow (Russia)-History-20th century KW - Moscow (Russia)-Intellectual life-20th century KW - Soviet Union-History-1925-1953 KW - Soviet Union-Intellectual life-1917-1970 KW - Electronic books N1 - Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction: The Cultural Turn -- Chapter 1. The Author as Producer: Cultural Revolution in Berlin and Moscow (1930-1931) -- Chapter 2. Moscow, the Lettered City -- Chapter 3. The Return of the Aesthetic -- Chapter 4. The Traveling Mode and the Horizon of Identity -- Chapter 5. "World Literature"/ "World Culture" and the Era of the Popular Front (c. 1935-1936) -- Chapter 6. Face and Mask: Theatricality and Identity in the Era of the Show Trials (1936-1938) -- Chapter 7. Love and Death in the Time of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) -- Chapter 8. The Imperial Sublime -- Chapter 9. The Battle over the Genres (1937-1941) -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Acknowledgments -- Index N2 - The sixteenth-century monk Filofei proclaimed Moscow the Third Rome. By the 1930s, intellectuals and artists all over the world thought of Moscow as a mecca of secular enlightenment. Clark shows how Soviet officials and intellectuals sought to establish their capital as the Fourth Rome--a cosmopolitan post-Christian beacon for the rest of the world UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/orpp/detail.action?docID=3301003 ER -