Description

Book Synopsis

Cold has long been a fixture of Russian identity both within and beyond the borders of Russia and the Soviet Union, even as the ongoing effects of climate change complicate its meaning and cultural salience. The Russian Cold assembles fascinating new contributions from a variety of scholarly traditions, offering new perspectives on how to understand this mainstay of Russian culture and history. In chapters encompassing such diverse topics as polar exploration, the Eastern Front in World War II, and the iconography of hockey, it explores the multiplicity and ambiguity of “cold” in the Russian context and demonstrates the value of environmental-historical research for enriching national and imperial histories.



Trade Review

“For a country that celebrates the victory of General Winter, the lack of scholarly examination on the cold, and climate in general, is an obvious lacuna in Russian studies. Herzberg and her colleagues are to be commended for breaking ground on the topic. The mix of history of science with cultural and gender studies offered in this volume challenges scholars across the field to consider how the cold impacts their own studies. We can hope this volume marks the beginning of a new field worth exploring.” • Slavonic and East European Review

“Overall, the collection of chapters is full of insight and serves as a welcome and original introduction to this chilling topic.” • Eurasian Geography and Economics

“This collection foregrounds one of Russia’s most distinctive natural features: the cold. Together the contributions advance comparative climate history in new directions by attending not only to place, period, and politics, but to an even more fundamental condition of the human experience.” • Andy Bruno, Northern Illinois University

“This diverse collection provides interesting and important studies on how the cold climate in Russia was experienced, studied and imagined by various actors in different periods of its history.” • Alla Bolotova, Aalto University



Table of Contents

Part I: Foundations

Introduction: The Russian Cold
Julia Herzberg, Andreas Renner, Ingrid Schierle

Chapter 1. Climate Ideas and the Cold in Russia
Julia Herzberg

Part II: Science and Politics

Chapter 2. The Nature of Cold: Russia’s Climate and the Academy of Sciences in the Eighteenth Century
Julia Herzberg

Chapter 3. The Russian South Pole Expedition in the Context of Political Interests of the Soviet Union during the Cold War era
Erki Tammiksaar

Chapter 4. The Subarctic: A Classic Soviet Study of the Tundra
Denis J. B. Shaw

Part III: Images and Narratives

Chapter 5. From a “Country of Cold and Gloom” to a “Welcoming Land”: Climate and the Image of Siberia in the Russian Periodical Press, 1860s to the Early 1900s
Nataliia Rodigina

Chapter 6. Local Warming: Cold, Ice and Snow in Russian and Soviet Cinema
Oksana Bulgakowa

Chapter 7. The Aesthetics of Cold: Narrating National Trauma in Film
Roman Mauer

Part IV: Pain and Pleasure

Chapter 8. The Wehrmacht and the Russian Winter: The Impact of Climate at the Front and in Soviet Captivity
Aleksandr Kuzminykh

Chapter 9. Winter Tourism and Skiing in the Soviet Union: School of Courage, Source of Health, National Pastime
Aleksei Popov

Chapter 10. Heroes of the Ice: The Polar Explorer and the Hockey Player as Two Masculine Identity Scripts of the Soviet Era
Alexander Ananyev

Conclusion
Julia Herzberg, Andreas Renner, Ingrid Schierle

The Russian Cold: Histories of Ice, Frost, and

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    A Hardback by Julia Herzberg, Andreas Renner, Ingrid Schierle

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 13/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800731271, 978-1800731271
      ISBN10: 1800731272

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Cold has long been a fixture of Russian identity both within and beyond the borders of Russia and the Soviet Union, even as the ongoing effects of climate change complicate its meaning and cultural salience. The Russian Cold assembles fascinating new contributions from a variety of scholarly traditions, offering new perspectives on how to understand this mainstay of Russian culture and history. In chapters encompassing such diverse topics as polar exploration, the Eastern Front in World War II, and the iconography of hockey, it explores the multiplicity and ambiguity of “cold” in the Russian context and demonstrates the value of environmental-historical research for enriching national and imperial histories.



      Trade Review

      “For a country that celebrates the victory of General Winter, the lack of scholarly examination on the cold, and climate in general, is an obvious lacuna in Russian studies. Herzberg and her colleagues are to be commended for breaking ground on the topic. The mix of history of science with cultural and gender studies offered in this volume challenges scholars across the field to consider how the cold impacts their own studies. We can hope this volume marks the beginning of a new field worth exploring.” • Slavonic and East European Review

      “Overall, the collection of chapters is full of insight and serves as a welcome and original introduction to this chilling topic.” • Eurasian Geography and Economics

      “This collection foregrounds one of Russia’s most distinctive natural features: the cold. Together the contributions advance comparative climate history in new directions by attending not only to place, period, and politics, but to an even more fundamental condition of the human experience.” • Andy Bruno, Northern Illinois University

      “This diverse collection provides interesting and important studies on how the cold climate in Russia was experienced, studied and imagined by various actors in different periods of its history.” • Alla Bolotova, Aalto University



      Table of Contents

      Part I: Foundations

      Introduction: The Russian Cold
      Julia Herzberg, Andreas Renner, Ingrid Schierle

      Chapter 1. Climate Ideas and the Cold in Russia
      Julia Herzberg

      Part II: Science and Politics

      Chapter 2. The Nature of Cold: Russia’s Climate and the Academy of Sciences in the Eighteenth Century
      Julia Herzberg

      Chapter 3. The Russian South Pole Expedition in the Context of Political Interests of the Soviet Union during the Cold War era
      Erki Tammiksaar

      Chapter 4. The Subarctic: A Classic Soviet Study of the Tundra
      Denis J. B. Shaw

      Part III: Images and Narratives

      Chapter 5. From a “Country of Cold and Gloom” to a “Welcoming Land”: Climate and the Image of Siberia in the Russian Periodical Press, 1860s to the Early 1900s
      Nataliia Rodigina

      Chapter 6. Local Warming: Cold, Ice and Snow in Russian and Soviet Cinema
      Oksana Bulgakowa

      Chapter 7. The Aesthetics of Cold: Narrating National Trauma in Film
      Roman Mauer

      Part IV: Pain and Pleasure

      Chapter 8. The Wehrmacht and the Russian Winter: The Impact of Climate at the Front and in Soviet Captivity
      Aleksandr Kuzminykh

      Chapter 9. Winter Tourism and Skiing in the Soviet Union: School of Courage, Source of Health, National Pastime
      Aleksei Popov

      Chapter 10. Heroes of the Ice: The Polar Explorer and the Hockey Player as Two Masculine Identity Scripts of the Soviet Era
      Alexander Ananyev

      Conclusion
      Julia Herzberg, Andreas Renner, Ingrid Schierle

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