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Peter Kenez

    Peter Kenez es un profesor emérito de historia cuyo trabajo profundiza en la historia rusa y europea moderna. Sus intereses de investigación abarcan la historia de la Unión Soviética, Europa del Este, el siglo XX y el cine soviético. Como húngaro nativo y superviviente del Holocausto, la escritura de Kenez a menudo explora temas históricos y personales profundos, incluyendo los orígenes del genocidio y el impacto psicológico del miedo bajo regímenes opresivos. Sus contribuciones literarias ofrecen perspectivas perspicaces sobre períodos históricos críticos y sus consecuencias humanas.

    Stenberg Brothers
    The Birth of the Propaganda State
    • 2003

      The Birth of the Propaganda State

      Soviet Methods of Mass Mobilization, 1917-1929

      • 324 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Focusing on the mechanisms of communication, Peter Kenez explores the strategies employed by the Bolshevik Party to disseminate propaganda and connect with the Russian populace. The study delves into the evolution and impact of the Soviet propaganda system, highlighting its role in shaping public perception and ideology during a transformative period in Russian history. Through detailed analysis, Kenez reveals the complexities of political messaging and its significance in the broader context of Soviet governance.

      The Birth of the Propaganda State
    • 1997

      Stenberg Brothers

      Constructing a Revolution in Soviet Design

      • 96 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      The extraordinary film posters reproduced in this book, made in Russia by Vladimir and Georgii Stenberg from 1924 to 1933, exemplify a literal revolution in the graphic arts: the transformation of a primarily illustrative medium into one increasingly abstract, constructed, or collaged from a variety of sources. This book accompanies an exhibition of the posters opening at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in June 1977.The Stenberg brothers, like their contemporaries Aleksandr Rodchenko and El Lissitzky, were artists of immensely varied interests and eclectic skills. They were sculptors, architects, and stage and costume designers, and were enamored of the film and montage theories developed in the suddenly burgeoning Soviet film industry. As seen in this book's super colorplates, they brought to film poster design an extraordinary compositional dynamism, originality, and contrast of scale, employing many of the artistic conventions of the Constructivist movement.

      Stenberg Brothers