Cover image for Into the Cosmos : Space Exploration and Soviet Culture.
Into the Cosmos : Space Exploration and Soviet Culture.
Title:
Into the Cosmos : Space Exploration and Soviet Culture.
Author:
Andrews, James T.
ISBN:
9780822977469
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (343 pages)
Series:
Pitt Russian East European
Contents:
Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Space Exploration in the Soviet Context // James T. Andrews and Asif A. Siddiqi -- Part 1. The Space Project: Cultural Context and Historical Background -- 1. The Cultural Spaces of the Soviet Cosmos // Alexei Kojevnikov -- 2. Getting Ready for Krushchev's Sputnik: Russian Popular Culture and National Markers at the Dawn of the Space Age // James T. Andrews -- Part II. Myth and Reality in the Soviet Space Program -- 3. Cosmic Contradictions: Popular Enthusiasm and Secrecy in the Soviet Space Program // Asif A. Siddiqi -- 4. The Human inside a Propaganda Machine: The Public Image and Professional Identity of Soviet Cosmonauts // Slava Gerovitch -- 5. The Sincere Deceiver: Yuri Gagarin and the Search for a Higher Truth // Andrew Jenks -- 6. Cold War Celebrity and the Courageous Canine Scout: The Life and Times of Soviet Space Dogs // Amy Nelson -- Part III. The Soviet Space Program and the Cultural Front -- 7. Cosmic Enlightenment: Scientific Atheism and the Soviet Conquest of Space // Victoria Smolkin-Rothrock -- 8. She Orbits over the Sex Barrier: Soviet Girls and the Tereshkova Moment // Roshanna P. Sylvester -- 9. From the Kitchen into Orbit: The Convergence of Human Spaceflight and Krushchev's Nascent Consumerism // Cathleen S. Lewis -- 10. Cold War Theaters: Cosmonaut Titov at the Berlin Wall // Heater L. Gumbert -- Notes -- Contributors -- Index.
Abstract:
The launch of the Sputnik satellite in October 1957 changed the course of human history. In the span of a few years, Soviets sent the first animal into space, the first man, and the first woman. These events were a direct challenge to the United States and the capitalist model that claimed ownership of scientific aspiration and achievement.       The success of the space program captured the hopes and dreams of nearly every Soviet citizen and became a critical cultural vehicle in the country's emergence from Stalinism and the devastation of World War II. It also proved to be an invaluable tool in a worldwide propaganda campaign for socialism, a political system that could now seemingly accomplish anything it set its mind to.        Into the Cosmos shows us the fascinating interplay of Soviet politics, science, and culture during the Khrushchev era, and how the space program became a binding force between these elements. The chapters examine the ill-fitted use of cosmonauts as propaganda props, the manipulation of gender politics after Valentina Tereshkova's flight, and the use of public interest in cosmology as a tool for promoting atheism. Other chapters explore the dichotomy of promoting the space program while maintaining extreme secrecy over its operations, space animals as media darlings, the history of Russian space culture, and the popularity of space-themed memorabilia that celebrated Soviet achievement and planted the seeds of consumerism.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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