Show simple item record

"Believe, Brothers, We Do Not Live in Vain": Animal World in Late Soviet Culture
[journal article]

dc.contributor.authorGanzha, Anna G.de
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-08T18:16:57Z
dc.date.available2025-01-08T18:16:57Z
dc.date.issued2019de
dc.identifier.issn2074-0492de
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/98872
dc.description.abstractThe world of animals in late Soviet culture is considered as an example of an "imagined world" based on the performative practices of demonstration and contemplation of things and their signs. The fact that in the period under review, in the field of cultural colonization of "wildlife", historicity is displaced by performativity, is determined by the tradition of Russian literary animalism. In this tradition the animal is not deprived of subjectivity or agency, yet these qualities get their meaning only within the horizon of the Human: the animal as such is unhistorical and no story about the animal world is possible without a connection to the human world. We will use several cases to discuss, firstly, the role of performativity in the construction of the animal world and, secondly, the role of communicative practices in the process of establishing relationships between the animal and human worlds. Performativity and communicative efficiency, being transposed into the space of the Work, is consistently opposed as visibility vs. reality, unproductivity vs. creativity, social atomization vs. experience of togetherness or belonging, disenchantment vs. re-enchantment of the world. Our examples demonstrate different possibilities of overcoming the sentimental pathos in the treatment of relations between humans and non-humans, inevitable in cases where the animalistic narrative is limited to the theme of vain suffering of the animal in an alien world. The ethics of compassion evolves here into the ethics of collaboration and the practice of moral construction of a particular communicative community.de
dc.languagerude
dc.subject.ddcPhilosophiede
dc.subject.ddcPhilosophyen
dc.subject.otheranimal world; late Soviet culture; humanist animalism; environmental ethics; collectivede
dc.title"Верьте, братцы, живем не напрасно": мир животных в позднесоветской культуреde
dc.title.alternative"Believe, Brothers, We Do Not Live in Vain": Animal World in Late Soviet Culturede
dc.description.reviewbegutachtetde
dc.description.reviewrevieweden
dc.source.journalSociologija vlasti / Sociology of power
dc.source.volume31de
dc.publisher.countryRUSde
dc.source.issue3de
dc.subject.classozPhilosophie, Theologiede
dc.subject.classozPhilosophy, Ethics, Religionen
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-98872-1
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht kommerz., Keine Bearbeitung 4.0de
dc.rights.licenceCreative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0en
internal.statusformal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossende
dc.type.stockarticlede
dc.type.documentZeitschriftenartikelde
dc.type.documentjournal articleen
dc.source.pageinfo119-139de
internal.identifier.classoz30100
internal.identifier.journal2720
internal.identifier.document32
internal.identifier.ddc100
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.22394/2074-0492-2019-3-119-139de
dc.description.pubstatusVeröffentlichungsversionde
dc.description.pubstatusPublished Versionen
internal.identifier.licence20
internal.identifier.pubstatus1
internal.identifier.review2
dc.subject.classhort30100de
internal.pdf.validfalse
internal.pdf.wellformedtrue
internal.pdf.encryptedfalse


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record