ABSTRACT

The political revolutions which established state socialism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe were accompanied by revolutions in the word, as the communist project implied not only remaking the world but also renaming it. As new institutions, social roles, rituals and behaviours emerged, so did language practices that designated, articulated and performed these phenomena. This book examines the use of communist language in the Stalinist and post-Stalinist periods. It goes beyond characterising this linguistic variety as crude "newspeak", showing how official language was much more complex – the medium through which important political-ideological messages were elaborated, transmitted and also contested, revealing contradictions, discursive cleavages and performative variations. The book examines the subject comparatively across a range of East European countries besides the Soviet Union, and draws on perspectives from a range of scholarly disciplines – sociolinguistics, anthropology, literary and cultural studies, historiography, and translation studies.

Petre Petrov is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Texas at Austin.

Lara Ryazanova-Clarke is Head of Russian and Academic Director of the Princess Dashkova Russia Centre in the School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures at the University of Edinburgh.

part |71 pages

Language regimes of Stalinism

chapter |21 pages

Linguistic turn à la Soviétique

The power of grammar, and the grammar of power *

chapter |23 pages

The Soviet gnomic

On the peculiarities of generic statements in Stalinist officialese

chapter |25 pages

Aesopian language

The politics and poetics of naming the unnameable

part |77 pages

Negotiating codes of communism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe

chapter |21 pages

From subject of action to object of description

The classes in the Romanian official discourse during communism

chapter |18 pages

Speaking Titoism

Student opposition and the socialist language regime of Yugoslavia

chapter |17 pages

Deviant dialectics

Intertextuality, voice and emotion in Czechoslovak socialist Kritika

chapter |19 pages

‘Birdwatchers of the world, unite!'

The language of Soviet ideology in translation

part |54 pages

Soviet vernaculars after Communism

chapter |27 pages

Linguistic mnemonics

The communist language variety in contemporary Russian public discourse

chapter |25 pages

‘The golden age of Soviet Antiquity'

Sovietisms in the discourse of left-wing political movements in post-Soviet Russia, 1991–2013