Stalinist monumental art and architecture, and the "immortalization of memory"
<p>This thesis analyzes the “immortalization of memory” policy of the Stalinist regime in the USSR (1932-1954), a program that sought to ensure that contemporaneous events and individuals would be remembered by posterity, in perpetuity. “Immortalization,” I argue, was carried out through the c...
Main Author: | Kalashnikov, A |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Healey, D |
Format: | Thesis |
Published: |
2019
|
Subjects: |
Similar Items
-
Revisioning Stalinist discourse of art: Mikhail Liebman’s academic networks and his social art history
by: Krista Kodres
Published: (2022-12-01) -
Architectures of identity: English modernism, domesticity, and imperial decline
by: Ketteringham, SD
Published: (2022) -
Antique lapidary monuments from the excavations of the "Basilica in 1935"
by: E.N. Zherebtsov
Published: (2008-02-01) -
Facing the Work of Art. Memories of My Student Years
by: Piotr Skubiszewski
Published: (2019-12-01) -
Synagogue Architecture of Latvia between Archeology and Eschatology
by: Sergey R. Kravtsov
Published: (2019-08-01)