Abstract

The article deals with the historical novels reception of Howard Fast (a writer who was extremely popular in the 1950s, though he is almost forgotten now) in the Soviet Union. Once a USA Communist Party member loyal to the USSR, he became a fierce opponent of Soviet communism. The analysis of the American context uncovers the reasons why the author of left-wing beliefs turned to the genre of a historical novel and peculiarities of the literary market he faced. A close study of Soviet reviews demonstrates that the novels The Last Frontier and The Freedom Road were perceived by Soviet literary critics as Fasts protest against racial discrimination and growing right-wing sentiment. These problems were a matter of urgency against the background of the McCarthy campaign, which Fast fell victim to in 1947. His novel The Freedom Road was put on the stage in Moscow theaters. According to Soviet reviewers, the absence of decadent primitivism set Fast apart from other once-friendly Soviet writers such as Richard Wright and Claude McKay. Within this tradition of exoticism criticism, dating back to the 1920s and 1930s, novels about distant lands were highly appreciated only when ethnographic descriptions were used for consistent social criticism. Being a committed supporter of the concept art as a weapon developed in the Soviet Union, Fast perceived exaggerated exoticism, top-heavy descriptions of historical novels as a sign of escapist literature that ignores the method of dialectical materialism.

Highlights

  • The article deals with the historical novels’ reception of Howard Fast in the Soviet Union

  • Once a USA Communist Party member loyal to the USSR, he became a fierce opponent of Soviet communism

  • The analysis of the American context uncovers the reasons why the author of left-wing beliefs turned to the genre of a historical novel and peculiarities of the literary market he faced

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Summary

ЗАРУБЕЖНАЯ ЛИТЕРАТУРА FOREIGN LITERATURE

Исход шайеннов и линчевание негров: рецепция исторических романов Говарда Фаста в СССР1. Краткий обзор советских рецензий позволяет продемонстрировать, что романы «Последняя граница» и «Дорога свободы» воспринимались советскими литературоведами как протест Фаста против расовой дискриминации и растущего могущества правых сил. О степени популярности писателя в Советском Союзе свидетельствуют и инсценировки его романа «Дорога свободы» на сцене московских театров, анализ которых приводится в статье. Сам Фаст, поддерживая разработанную в Советском Союзе концепцию «искусство как оружие», также рассматривал утрированную экзотику, пышную декоративность исторических романов как примету эскапистской литературы, которая игнорирует метод диалектического материализма. Исход шайеннов и линчевание негров: рецепция исторических романов Говарда Фаста в СССР // Вестник Российского университета дружбы народов. Lomonosov Moscow State University, 1 Leninskie Gory, Moscow, 119991, Russian Federation

Исторический роман и литература левого толка
Экзотизм и социальный критицизм
Советские инсценировки
Full Text
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