Description

Book Synopsis
Exploring the Lenin cult’s mystical, historical, and political aspects, Tumarkin demonstrates the galvanizing power of ritual in the establishment of the post-revolutionary regime. In a new Preface and Postscript, she brings the story up to date, considering the fall of the Soviet Union and Russia's new democracy.

Trade Review
There were important reasons for embalming Lenin, and they are thoroughly and meticulously described in Nina Tumarkin’s book. This is an exquisite work which might be variously labeled a study in the sociology of religion or in the political and ideological history of the Soviet Union. It analyzes in great detail the emergence, development, and significance of the quasi-religious, state-imposed cult of Lenin in the history of Soviet ideology and institutions...Vivid, learned, and elegant. -- Leszek Kolakowski * New Republic *
An excellent book on an important subject...In unravelling the historical origins of the cult [Tumarkin] has done us a considerable service. She displays, moreover, a wide range of learning and an acute perception. -- Geoffrey A. Hosking * Times Literary Supplement *
Neither a work of hagiography nor part of the trend of debunking historiography, this work sets itself a far more sophisticated task. The aim is to dig deep under the veneer of political resolutions and rhetoric of Soviet life to understand both the world view of the venerated (Lenin until his death in January 1924, and then the mythic elements of the Soviet order that he came to represent), and the motivations and belief systems of the venerators, that is, what used to be called the masses...The book overall is a stimulating and remarkably well-written analysis of an important phenomenon. Neither hagiography nor demonology (although the two usually march hand in hand), the work provides a balanced and enjoyable discussion of a facet of the Soviet experience that places the rest in perspective. -- Richard Sakwa * Labour History Review [UK] *

Table of Contents
Russian roots of the Lenin cult; Vladimir Ilich Ulianov-Lenin; Lenin and the Bolshevik myth; illness and immortality; the nation mourns; the body and the shrine; Lenin's life after death.

Lenin Lives The Lenin Cult in Soviet Russia

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    A Paperback by Lenin Tumarkin

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      View other formats and editions of Lenin Lives The Lenin Cult in Soviet Russia by Lenin Tumarkin

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 5/7/1997 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780674524316, 978-0674524316
      ISBN10: 0674524314

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Exploring the Lenin cult’s mystical, historical, and political aspects, Tumarkin demonstrates the galvanizing power of ritual in the establishment of the post-revolutionary regime. In a new Preface and Postscript, she brings the story up to date, considering the fall of the Soviet Union and Russia's new democracy.

      Trade Review
      There were important reasons for embalming Lenin, and they are thoroughly and meticulously described in Nina Tumarkin’s book. This is an exquisite work which might be variously labeled a study in the sociology of religion or in the political and ideological history of the Soviet Union. It analyzes in great detail the emergence, development, and significance of the quasi-religious, state-imposed cult of Lenin in the history of Soviet ideology and institutions...Vivid, learned, and elegant. -- Leszek Kolakowski * New Republic *
      An excellent book on an important subject...In unravelling the historical origins of the cult [Tumarkin] has done us a considerable service. She displays, moreover, a wide range of learning and an acute perception. -- Geoffrey A. Hosking * Times Literary Supplement *
      Neither a work of hagiography nor part of the trend of debunking historiography, this work sets itself a far more sophisticated task. The aim is to dig deep under the veneer of political resolutions and rhetoric of Soviet life to understand both the world view of the venerated (Lenin until his death in January 1924, and then the mythic elements of the Soviet order that he came to represent), and the motivations and belief systems of the venerators, that is, what used to be called the masses...The book overall is a stimulating and remarkably well-written analysis of an important phenomenon. Neither hagiography nor demonology (although the two usually march hand in hand), the work provides a balanced and enjoyable discussion of a facet of the Soviet experience that places the rest in perspective. -- Richard Sakwa * Labour History Review [UK] *

      Table of Contents
      Russian roots of the Lenin cult; Vladimir Ilich Ulianov-Lenin; Lenin and the Bolshevik myth; illness and immortality; the nation mourns; the body and the shrine; Lenin's life after death.

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