The Soviet Trickster explores narratives in Soviet and post-Soviet culture featuring rogues, swindlers, and improbable adventurers who enjoyed widespread popularity across Russia. These figures simultaneously mocked and justified the pervasive culture of Soviet cynicism, facilitating subversive counter-narratives that challenged the power and incompetence of the state. Mark Lipovetsky thoroughly analyzes the most remarkable and popular Soviet tricksters in literature, film, visual art, and performance, discussing different facets of the trickster: their nihilistic revolutionary messianism, problematic ethics, role within the Soviet empire, and connections to underground culture and gender politics. Through the combination of seemingly incompatible features thanks to its ambivalent and transgressive nature, the trickster becomes a parody and deconstruction of the Soviet "messiah" – the new Soviet man envisioned by communist propaganda. The Soviet Trickster reveals how after the collapse of the USSR, the trickster loses its critical potential and aligns with authoritarian power, serving as its populist avatar. Nonetheless, tricksters remain inexhaustible: they constantly reinvent themselves to sabotage new forms of political cynicism and authoritarianism.
Mark Lipovetsky is Professor in the Department of Slavic Languages at Columbia University. He is the author, coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than thirty books, including "All the World on a Page" and A History of Russian Literature.
Mark Lipovetsky, Maria Engström, Tomáš Glanc, Ilja Kukuj, Klavdia Smola, Columbia University) Lipovetsky, Mark (Professor at the Department of Slavic Languages, Professor at the Department of Slavic Languages, Uppsala University) Engstrom, Maria (Professor of Russian at the Department of Modern Languages, Professor of Russian at the Department of Modern Languages, University of Zurich) Glanc, Tomas (Professor at the Department of Slavic Studies, Professor at the Department of Slavic Studies, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich) Kukuj, Ilja (Coordinator for Russian Language Studies, Coordinator for Russian Language Studies, University of Dresden) Smola, Klavdia (Professor and Chair of Slavic Literatures, Professor and Chair of Slavic Literatures, Department of Slavic Studies
Andrew Kahn, Mark Lipovetsky, Irina Reyfman, Stephanie Sandler, Oxford) Kahn, Andrew (St Edmund Hall, Mark (University of Colorado-Boulder) Lipovetsky, Irina (Columbia University) Reyfman, Stephanie (Harvard University) Sandler
Yana Hashamova, Beth Holmgren, Mark Lipovetsky, USA) Hashamova, Yana (Ohio State University, USA) Holmgren, Beth (Duke University, USA) Lipovetsky, Mark (University of Colorado
Andrew Kahn, Mark Lipovetsky, Irina Reyfman, Stephanie Sandler, Oxford) Kahn, Andrew (St Edmund Hall, Mark (University of Colorado-Boulder) Lipovetsky, Irina (Columbia University) Reyfman, Stephanie (Harvard University) Sandler
Yana Hashamova, Beth Holmgren, Mark Lipovetsky, USA) Hashamova, Yana (Ohio State University, USA) Holmgren, Beth (Duke University, USA) Lipovetsky, Mark (University of Colorado