The flexible and the pliant: Disturbed organisms of Soviet modernity

被引:21
作者
Oushakine, SA [1 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10027 USA
关键词
Russia; technology; biopolitics; subjectivity; everyday life;
D O I
10.1525/can.2004.19.3.392
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
In the texts of prominent Soviet figures such as writer Maxim Gorky, the agrobiologist Trofim Lysenko, and the educator Anton Makarenko, the uncertainty of social norms in early Soviet society became equated with an instability of environment in general and nature in particular A powerful and vivid rhetoric of a "second nature," to use Gorky's phrase, overcame the absence of clearly articulated models for subjectivity A series of disciplining routines and activities capable of producing the new Soviet subject compensated in the 1930s for the dissolution of the daily order of things and all the structuring effects, social networks, and reciprocal obligations that were associated with it. [Russia, technology, biopolitics, subjectivity, everyday life].
引用
收藏
页码:392 / 428
页数:37
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