ABSTRACT

This book examines folk music and dance revival movements in Russia, exploring why this folk culture has come to represent Russia, how it has been approached and produced, and why memory and tradition, in these particular forms, have taken on particular significance in different periods. Above all it shows how folk "tradition" in Russia is an artificial cultural construct, which is periodically reinvented, and it demonstrates in particular how the "folk revival" has played a key role in strengthening Russian national consciousness in the post-Soviet period.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

chapter |10 pages

Professionalism and the Education System

chapter |36 pages

The Khrushchev Era and Village Prose

chapter 4|11 pages

Revival and Identity after Socialism

chapter |1 pages

’Folk’: A Problem of Terminology

chapter |17 pages

Authenticity

chapter |6 pages

Nationalism and Regionalism

chapter |7 pages

Imagining the Past in Religious Ritual

chapter |2 pages

Cossacks under Soviet Power

chapter |10 pages

Masculinity

chapter 7|8 pages

The Village Revives

chapter |15 pages

Returning Memory to the Village

chapter 9|15 pages

Conclusion: Folklore and Popular Culture

chapter |2 pages

Group Interviews, listed by location