Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewIn some ways, the volume reminds me of a thoughtfully organized musical album in that it tells a story with a beginning, middle and an end. Despite having multiple authors, the story develops logically from one chapter to the next—quite an accomplishment.
-- Patryk Babiracki, author of Soviet Soft Power in Poland: Culture and the Making of Stalin's New Empire, 1943–1957
Wide-ranging in its Cold War geography, rigorously internationalist, and focused on the concept of media over a variety of forms and methods, Lovejoy and Pajala's volume will set the standard for any future scholarship on the topic.
-- Rossen Djagalov, author of From Internationalism to Postcolonialism
Ballasted by primary sources in all relevant languages, together these meticulously researched essays complicate, through the fluid logic of media, the conventional epochal and geopolitical fault lines of post-WWII cultures. An indispensable volume.
-- Nataša Ďurovičová, coeditor of World Cinemas, Transnational Perspectives
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Note on Translation and Transliteration
1. Introduction, by Alice Lovejoy and Mari Pajala
Part I: Mobile Forms
2. Stalin Boulevard: Panoramic Vistas and Urban Planning in Eastern European Photobooks, by Katie Trumpener
3. The Peace Train: Anticosmopolitanism, Internationalism, and Jazz on Czechoslovak Radio during Stalinism, by Rosamund Johnston
4. Soviet Drama with Commercial Breaks: Living the Cold War in 1970s Finnish Television, by Anu Koivunen
Part II: Distribution, Adaptation, Reception
5. Soviet Cinema in 1960s Cuba: Between Cold War Logics and Thirdworldist Affinities, by Masha Salazkina
6. From the Antechamber to the International Stage: Early-Career Directors from Hungary at the Mannheim Film Festival in the Late 1970s, by Sonja Simonyi
7. Manic Miners of the World, Unite! How the British Hit Computer Game Got a Second Life in Czechoslovakia, by Jaroslav Švelch
8. Between Scripts: Radio Berlin International (RBI) and Its Swedish Audience in November 1989, by Marie Cronqvist
Part III: Translation
9. On Soviet Spoken Cinema, by Elena Razlogova
10. A GDR Writer in America: Christa Wolf's Visit to Oberlin and the Circulation of Her Writing as World Literature, by Brangwen Stone
11. Translating Cold War Internationalism: Allegoresis in Ryszard Kapusìcinìski's Literary Reportage, by Marla Zubel
12. Traveling with the President: Finnish-Soviet State Visits and 1970s Television Diplomacy, by Laura Saarenmaa
Part IV: Infrastructure and Production
13. Hollywood Going East: State-Socialist Studios' Opportunistic Business with American Producers, by Petr Szczepanik
14. Envisioning the Revolutionary South: The Soviet-Italian Coproduction Life is Beautiful (1979), by Stefano Pisu
15. Dividing the Cosmos? INTELSAT, Intersputnik, and the Development of Transnational Satellite Communications Infrastructures during the Cold War, by Christine Evans and Lars Lundgren
16. Spy from the Cloud: From Big Brother to Big Data, by Anikó Imre
Index