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Reorientalism by Nariman Skakov

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Reorientalism

From Avant-garde to Soviet National Form

Nariman Skakov

Columbia University Press · Print & ebook · October 28, 2025

Reading lane: Russian Lit Crit

It is commonly believed that Stalinism ended a vibrant period in Soviet avant-garde art and literature.

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Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy Russian Lit CritGood for readers who enjoy Russian Lit Crit and East European Literary Criticism.

Book Details

Authors
Nariman Skakov
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Published
October 28, 2025
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Russian Lit Crit · East European Literary Criticism
Reading lane
Russian Lit Crit

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Publisher Categories

  • Russian Lit Crit

  • 21st Century Literature

  • Politics in Literature

About This Book

It is commonly believed that Stalinism ended a vibrant period in Soviet avant-garde art and literature. The triumph of socialist realism, in this view, curtailed experimentation with aesthetic form and replaced it with a call for clarity, accessibility, and ideological conformity. But Stalin’s formula “national in form, socialist in content” gave artists an opening for officially sanctioned formal innovation—as long as it drew on the national cultures of the Soviet Union. Na...

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It is commonly believed that Stalinism ended a vibrant period in Soviet avant-garde art and literature. The triumph of socialist realism, in this view, curtailed experimentation with aesthetic form and replaced it with a call for clarity, accessibility, and ideological conformity. But Stalin’s formula “national in form, socialist in content” gave artists an opening for officially sanctioned formal innovation—as long as it drew on the national cultures of the Soviet Union. Nariman Skakov offers a new way to understand Soviet modernism, showing how writers and artists looked to the East to renew avant-garde experimentalism under Stalin. He traces how figures such as Victor Shklovsky, Aleksandr Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova, Dziga Vertov, and Sergei Eisenstein responded to the Soviet state’s ideological demands by engaging with the traditions of the new socialist republics in Central Asia. The concept of national form gave these artists a sanctuary for aesthetic innovation, yet this experimentation relied on exoticization of the “strangeness” of the Soviet East and a fascination with ethnic others. Recasting Soviet aesthetics from the vantage point of Central Asia, Skakov rethinks orientalism and its relationship to socialism. Challenging conventional narratives of the fate of the Soviet avant-garde, Reorientalism provides a deeply original decentering of modernism.

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