Jump to content

LEF (journal): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Citation bot (talk | contribs)
Alter: journal, title. Added jstor. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Magazines disestablished in 1929 | #UCB_Category 6/33
 
(46 intermediate revisions by 25 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{more citations needed|date=May 2018}}
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:Novyi LEF 1928.jpg|thumb|240px|An issue of Novyi LEF designed by [[Rodchenko]], 1928]] -->
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:Novyi LEF 1928.jpg|thumb|240px|An issue of Novyi LEF designed by [[Rodchenko]], 1928]] -->
{{Infobox magazine
'''LEF''' ("'''ЛЕФ'''") was the journal of the '''Left Front of the Arts''' ("Левый фронт искусств"{{spaced ndash}}''"Levy Front Iskusstv"''), a widely ranging association of [[avant-garde]] writers, photographers, critics and designers in the [[Soviet Union]]. It had two runs, one from 1923 to 1925 as LEF, and later from 1927 to 1929 as ''Novy LEF'' ('New LEF'). The journal's objective, as set out in one of its first issues, was to "re-examine the ideology and practices of so-called leftist art, and to abandon individualism to increase art's value for developing communism."
| title = LEF
| logo =
| logo_size = <!-- default is 180px -->
| image_file = LEF journal covers.gif
| image_size = <!-- default is 180px -->
| image_alt =
| image_caption = The first two issues of the journal.
| editor = <!-- up to |editor6= -->
| editor_title = <!-- up to |editor_title6= -->
| previous_editor =
| staff_writer =
| photographer =
| category =
| frequency =
| format =
| circulation =
| publisher =
| paid_circulation =
| unpaid_circulation =
| circulation_year =
| total_circulation =
| founder =
| founded =
| firstdate = {{Start date and age|1923}}
| finaldate = {{End date and age|1929}}
| finalnumber =
| company =
| country = Soviet Union
| based =
| language = Russian
| website = <!-- {{URL|example.com}} -->
| issn =
| eissn =
| oclc =
}}
'''''LEF''''' ("'''''ЛЕФ'''''") was the journal of the '''Left Front of the Arts''' ("Левый фронт искусств"{{spaced ndash}}''"Levy Front Iskusstv"''), a widely ranging association of [[avant-garde]] writers, photographers, critics and designers in the [[Soviet Union]]. It had two runs, one from 1923 to 1925 as LEF, and later from 1927 to 1929 as ''[[Novy LEF]]'' ('New LEF').<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://archive.org/details/Screen_Volume_12_Issue_4|magazine=Screen Volume|title=Soviet Film 1920s: Translations from LEF, Novy LEF, Brik, Kuleshov, Shklovsky, Vertov. Mayakovsky Film Scenarios. Politics and Production: The work of Godard. Marinetti and Mayakovsky|volume=12|issue=4}}</ref> The journal's objective, as set out in one of its first issues, was to "re-examine the ideology and practices of so-called leftist art, and to abandon individualism to increase art's value for developing communism."


==Productivism==
==Productivism==
Although ''LEF'' was catholic in its choices of writers, it broadly reflected the concerns of the Productivist left-wing of [[Constructivism (art)|Constructivism]]. The editors were [[Osip Brik]] and [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]]: fittingly, one a [[Russian formalism|Russian Formalist]] critic and one a poet and designer who helped compose the 1912 manifesto of [[Russian Futurism|Russian Futurists]] entitled, "A Slap in the Face of Public Taste". The covers were designed by [[Alexander Rodchenko]], and featured photomontages early on, being followed by photographs in ''New LEF''. [[Varvara Stepanova]] also designed covers.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Yablonskaya|first=M. N.|title=Women Artists of Russias New Age: 1900-1935|publisher=Rizzoli|year=1971|isbn=|editor-last=Parton|editor-first=Anthony|location=New York|pages=153}}</ref>


Although LEF was catholic in its choices of writers, it broadly reflected the concerns of the Productivist left-wing of [[Constructivism (art)|Constructivism]]. The editors were [[Osip Brik]] and [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]]: fittingly, one a [[Russian formalism|Russian Formalist]] critic and one a poet and designer who helped compose the 1912 manifesto of [[Russian Futurism|Russian Futurists]] entitled, "A Slap in the Face of Public Taste". The covers were designed by [[Alexander Rodchenko]], and featured photomontages early on, being followed by photographs in New LEF. Among the writings published in LEF for the first time were Mayakovsky's long poem ''About This'', and [[Sergei Eisenstein]]'s ''The Montage of Attractions'', as well as more political and journalistic works like [[Isaac Babel]]'s ''[[Red Cavalry]]''. The journal had funding from the state, and was discussed critically, but not unsympathetically by [[Leon Trotsky]] in ''Literature and Revolution'' (1924).
Among the writings published in ''LEF'' for the first time were Mayakovsky's long poem ''About This'', and [[Sergei Eisenstein]]'s ''The Montage of Attractions'', as well as more political and journalistic works like [[Isaac Babel]]'s ''[[Red Cavalry]]''. The journal had funding from the state, and was discussed critically, but not unsympathetically by [[Leon Trotsky]] in ''[[Literature and Revolution]]'' (1924).


==Factography==
==Factography==
The later ''New LEF'' ("Новый ЛЕФ"{{spaced ndash}}''"Novy Lef"''), which was edited by Mayakovsky along with the playwright, screenplay writer and photographer [[Sergei Tretyakov]], tried to popularise the idea of '[[Factography]]': the idea that new technologies such as photography and film should be utilised by the working class for the production of 'factographic' works. In this it had a great deal of influence on theorists in the West, especially [[Walter Benjamin]] and [[Bertolt Brecht]]. Linked journals also appeared such as the Constructivist architectural journal ''SA'' (edited by [[Moisei Ginzburg]] and [[Alexander Vesnin]]) and ''Proletarskoe Foto'', on photography. The ''New LEF'' closed in 1929 over a dispute over its direction between Mayakovsky and Tretyakov, and under pressure for its 'Formalism', which jarred with the incipient [[Socialist Realism]].
The later ''New LEF'' ("Новый ЛЕФ"{{spaced ndash}}''"Novy Lef"''), which was edited by Mayakovsky along with the playwright, screenplay writer and photographer [[Sergei Tretyakov (writer)|Sergei Tretyakov]], tried to popularise the idea of '[[factography]]': the idea that new technologies such as photography and film should be utilised by the working class for the production of 'factographic' works. In this it had a great deal of influence on theorists in the West, especially [[Walter Benjamin]] and [[Bertolt Brecht]]. Linked journals also appeared such as the Constructivist architectural journal ''SA'' (edited by [[Moisei Ginzburg]] and [[Alexander Vesnin]]) and ''Proletarskoe Foto'', on photography. The ''New LEF'' closed in 1929 over a dispute over its direction between Mayakovsky and Tretyakov, and under pressure for its 'Formalism', which jarred with the incipient [[Socialist Realism]].

==Some Contributors to LEF and Novy LEF==


==Some Contributors to ''LEF'' and ''Novy LEF''==
* [[Boris Arvatov]]
* [[Boris Arvatov]]
* [[Isaac Babel]]
* [[Isaac Babel]]
Line 16: Line 53:
* [[Nikolai Chuzhak]]
* [[Nikolai Chuzhak]]
* [[Sergei Eisenstein]]
* [[Sergei Eisenstein]]
* [[Alexei Gan]]
* [[Aleksei Gan]]
* [[Aleksei Gastev]]
* [[Aleksei Gastev]]
* [[Aleksei Kruchyonykh]]
* [[Boris Kušner]]
* [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]]
* [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]]
* [[Boris Pasternak]]
* [[Boris Pasternak]]
Line 23: Line 62:
* [[Alexander Rodchenko]]
* [[Alexander Rodchenko]]
* [[Viktor Shklovsky]]
* [[Viktor Shklovsky]]
* [[Sergei Tretyakov]]
* [[Sergei Tretyakov (writer)|Sergei Tretyakov]]
* [[Varvara Stepanova]]
* [[Varvara Stepanova]]
* [[Dziga Vertov]]
* [[Dziga Vertov]]

==The "Lenin issue"==

After [[Vladimir Lenin]]’s death on January 21, 1924, LEF’s first issue of the year dedicated its critical section to the Soviet leader (though the publication’s artistic prose and poetry were not Lenin-themed). These critical articles mainly focused on an analysis of Lenin’s writing and his oratory: this is because the Formalist critic [[Viktor Shklovsky]] independently organized the project <ref>{{cite journal |last1=Eisen |first1=Samuel |title=Whose Lenin Is It Anyway? Viktor Shklovsky, Boris Eikhenbaum and the Formalist-Marxist Debate in Soviet Cultural Politics (A View from the Twenties). |journal=The Russian Review |date=1996 |volume=55 |issue=1 |page=68 |doi=10.2307/131910|jstor=131910 }}</ref> and presented it to LEF. [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]] did, however, contribute an unsigned editorial to the issue, in which he criticized the newly-forming habit of Soviet authorities to “canonize” Lenin by mass-producing commercial objects with his portrait or likeness on them. The editorial argued that this practice would undermine Lenin's significance for future generations. In Mayakovsky's words, “Don’t take away his living gait and human traits, which he was able to preserve as he guided history. Lenin is still our contemporary. He is among the living. We need him alive, not dead.” [CVS 148]<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mayakovsky |first1=Vladimir |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=148}}</ref> The other articles do not explicitly develop this point, although they do focus on certain unusual, “human” particularities of Lenin's style.

In total, six writers contributed articles to the critical section of the issue. Their names and the titles of their works follow:
*1. Shklovsky - "Lenin as Decanonizer" («Ленин, как деканонизатор»)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Shklovsky |first1=Viktor |title=Ленин, как деканонизатор |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2958.html}}</ref>
*2. [[Boris Eikhenbaum]] - "Basic Stylistic Tendencies in Lenin's Speech" («Основные стилевые тенденции в речи Ленина»)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Eikhenbaum |first1=Boris |title=Основные стилевые тенденции в речи Ленина |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2959.html}}</ref>
*3. Lev Yakubinsky - "On Lenin's Deflation of the High Style" («О снижении высокого стиля у Ленина<ref>{{cite web |last1=Yakubinsky |first1=Lev |title=О снижении высокого стиля у Ленина |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2960.html}}</ref>»)
*4. [[Yuri Tynyanov]] - "Lenin's Lexicon as a Polemicist" («Словарь Ленина-полемиста»)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tynyanov |first1=Yuri |title=Словарь Ленина-полемиста |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2961.html}}</ref>
*5. Boris Kazansky - "Lenin's Speech - An Attempt at Rhetorical Analysis" («Речь Ленина: Опыт риторического анализа<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kazansky |first1=Boris |title=Речь Ленина: Опыт риторического анализа |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2962.html}}</ref>»)
*6. [[Boris Tomashevsky]] - "The Construction of the Theses" («Конструкция тезисов»)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tomashevsky |first1=Boris |title=Конструкция тезисов |url=http://www.ruthenia.ru/sovlit/j/2963.html}}</ref>

All of these men either belonged to one of two Formalist collectives, [[OPOJAZ]] (The Society For the Study of Poetic Language) and the [[Moscow Linguistic Circle]], or were associated with them. Accordingly, their contributions to this issue of LEF focus on Lenin's specific rhetorical techniques, and not on his broader historical or social importance, which is only alluded to in passing in the articles.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tomashevsky |first1=Boris |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=264}}</ref> Since these authors share certain theoretical assumptions about language and rhetoric, moreover, the articles often overlap in the specific topics of their investigations, and produce a stable group of core conclusions about Lenin's style.

'''''Defamiliarization:''''' [[Defamiliarization]], which can broadly be defined as the idea that the power of a work of art depends on how effectively it defies norms and subverts audiences’ expectations, is one of the most important and long-standing ideas in Formalist theory. It emerges as early as 1916, in Viktor Shklovsky's manifesto “Art as Device.”<ref>{{cite book |last1=Shklovsky |first1=Viktor |title=Theory of Prose |date=1990 |publisher=Dalkey Archive Press |pages=1–15}}</ref> It is therefore unsurprising that several of the articles explain Lenin's ability to communicate ideas effectively, an end he achieved through successfully “defamiliarizing,” or disrupting, stale, established revolutionary language. As Shklovsky writes, “His style consists in downplaying the revolutionary phrase, in replacing its traditional words with workaday synonyms.” <ref>{{cite book |last1=Shklovsky |first1=Viktor |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=152}}</ref> Tynyanov also pays attention to this aspect of Lenin's style, arguing that Lenin was always intently focused on whether or not the words that he was using at a given moment were “in sync” with the material realities that they were meant to describe, and that this attention to specificity was more important for Lenin than pretty-sounding turns of phrase.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tynyanov |first1=Yuri |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=212}}</ref>

'''''Lowering language:''''' As a result of Lenin's defamiliarization, his speeches and writing begin to seem “artless” in their straightforwardness. Kazansky, along with others, acknowledges this explicitly: “Lenin’s discourse always comes across as direct, artless, even colorless and indifferent… but this is not so.” <ref>{{cite book |last1=Kazansky |first1=Boris |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=226}}</ref> The Formalists do not intend this to be a criticism of Lenin's rhetoric: they instead argue that his atypical style was a pragmatic and effective rhetorical device itself, one that both set Lenin apart from his contemporaries and rivals (e.g., [[Leon Trotsky]]) and convinced his audience of his sincerity: “Nobody suspects Lenin’s discourse of artificiality and pretentiousness: it is utterly pragmatic.” <ref>{{cite book |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |pages=156, 227}}</ref> Eikhenbaum and Shklovsky suggest that Lenin shares this quality with established writers, such as [[Tolstoy]] and Mayakovsky.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Eikhenbaum |first1=Boris |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |pages=170–1}}</ref> In his article, Yakubinsky uses the word “deflation” to describe Lenin's antipathy to the traditional high style of Russian oratory.

'''''Polemics and parody:''''' Another essential element of Lenin's success was his willingness to openly mock his enemies, both in print and in his speeches. Eikhenbaum and Tynyanov suggest that Lenin's constant criticism of writings from tsarists and those socialist parties that were opposed to the [[Bolsheviks]] helped him develop a unique, striking rhetorical voice, since he was careful to oppose his opponents both ideologically and stylistically: “Lenin’s polemic itself was a significant shift in the tradition and realm of Russian oratory and Russian journalism. In his analysis of his opponent’s lexicon, Lenin supplies all the typical traits of his own lexicon.” <ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |pages=157, 215}}</ref> Lenin not only avoided “flowery,” cliché phrases in his work, but also actively strove to introduce “rude,” everyday words and ideas into his writing. This was extremely uncommon at the time, and therefore made him more memorable as a rhetorician: “They appeal to everyday life, and link up with everyone’s daily, ubiquitous speech. Consequently, they extend the most solid, quantitatively and qualitatively mundane associative ties between speaker and listener.” <ref>{{cite book |last1=Tynyanov |first1=Yuri |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=216}}</ref> Tynyanov is especially interested in this aspect of Lenin's style: it is connected with his own interest in parody, which he believed to be the artistic device that spurred literary evolution and the development of new forms of art.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tynyanov |first1=Yuri |title=Permanent Evolution: Selected Essays on Literature, Theory and Film |date=2019 |publisher=Academic Studies Press |pages=294–328}}</ref>

'''''Poetic devices in “prosaic” speech:''''' Although the Formalists were sometimes accused by their opponents of being pure aesthetes, who were attempting entirely to separate art from reality,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trotsky |first1=Leon |title=Literature and Revolution |date=2005 |publisher=Haymarket Books}}</ref> their work on Lenin reveals that this charge was not entirely accurate. After all, Lenin's journalism and speeches were not art, as Eikhenbaum readily admits: “the realm of so-called practical language is extremely broad and varied… As for such forms as oration, despite its seemingly practical character, it is quite like poetic speech. Poetic speech is typified only by a particular attitude to discrete discursive elements and their specific use, especially in poetry.”<ref>{{cite book |last1=Eikhenbaum |first1=Boris |editor1-last=Boynik |editor1-first=Sezgin |title=Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language |date=2018 |publisher=Rab-Rab Press |page=155}}</ref> In this sense, the Lenin issue represents a turning point in Formalist thought. They are applying concepts originally devised for poetic analysis to “prosaic” work, which furthers their project by demonstrating that Formalism's theoretical concepts, like defamiliarization and parodic evolution, need not be restricted to the study of art.

Shklovsky's original interest in analyzing Lenin may have been prompted by the ongoing polemic between the Formalists and more orthodox Marxist critics, like Leon Trotsky.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Eisen |first1=Samuel |title=Whose Lenin Is It Anyway? Viktor Shklovsky, Boris Eikhenbaum and the Formalist-Marxist Debate in Soviet Cultural Politics (A View from the Twenties). |journal=The Russian Review |date=1996 |volume=55 |issue=1 |page=68 |doi=10.2307/131910|jstor=131910 }}</ref> The overall effect of LEF's Lenin issue is that Lenin is presented as deeply pragmatic, more interested in the day-to-day questions of maintaining Bolshevik power than in any larger ideal. Moreover, by presenting Lenin as an ironic, flexible thinker, the Formalists subtly appropriated the Soviet leader for themselves. For as Ilya Kalinin writes, “their engagement with the figure of Lenin, which was only beginning to be canonized but already possessed an exceedingly powerful symbolic significance and social charge, for the sake of providing themselves with additional, political legitimation for their conceptions about the nature of poetic language, led to far-reaching theoretical consequences.”<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kalinin |first1=Ilya |title=Kak sdelan yazyk Lenina: material istorii i priem ideologii |journal=Vestnik Sankt-Peterburgskogo Universiteta. Yazyk I Literatura |date=2018 |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=607–8 }}</ref>

Reactions to LEF's interpretation of Lenin have varied. Within the [[Soviet Union]], it was received positively by the [[Futurist]] poet [[Aleksei Kruchenykh]], who went on to write and publish his own analysis of Lenin's language in the following year, heavily citing the LEF critics in his work. The emigre poet [[Vladislav Khodasevich]], conversely, stridently criticized the issue, claiming that it proved Shklovsky and his compatriots to be sycophants for the Communist government. However, although he found the critics’ language to be evasive, he admitted that their theoretical observations were justified.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Khodasevich |first1=Vladislav |title=Polnoe sobranie sochinenii v 8 tomakh, vol. 2 |date=2010 |publisher=Russkii put |location=Moscow |pages=306–9}}</ref> The issue has received relatively little mention in the West: Victor Erlich refers to Lenin's rhetoric as an “essentially bleak” topic that did not merit the attention lavished upon it.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Erlich |first1=Victor |title=Modernism and Revolution : Russian Literature in Transition |date=1994 |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge |page=220}}</ref> More recently, [[Boris Groys]] mentioned the issue in his book ''The Total Art of Stalinism'', claiming that it served as an example of how the Soviet avant-garde inadvertently helped canonize Lenin after his death.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Groys |first1=Boris |title=The Total Art of Stalinism |date=1992 |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=Princeton |page=68}}</ref> He does not, however, discuss the actual content of the articles.

== See also ==
*''[[Iskusstvo kommuny]]''

==References==
{{Reflist}}


== Sources ==
== Sources ==
*Victor Osipovich Pertsov (1954), 'Mayakovsky and LEF', ''News of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR'', Department of Literature and Languages, 1954, Volume 8, Issue 4
*Victor Osipovich Pertsov (1954), 'Mayakovsky and LEF', ''News of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR'', Department of Literature and Languages, 1954, Volume 8, Issue 4


{{italic title}}

[[Category:1923 establishments in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:1929 disestablishments in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Russian artist groups and collectives]]
[[Category:Constructivism (art)]]
[[Category:Defunct literary magazines published in Europe]]
[[Category:Magazines published in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Magazines established in 1923]]
[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 1929]]
[[Category:Russian avant-garde]]
[[Category:Russian avant-garde]]
[[Category:Russian formalism]]
[[Category:Russian formalism]]
[[Category:Soviet art]]
[[Category:Russian-language magazines]]
[[Category:Artist groups and collectives]]
[[Category:Literary magazines published in the Soviet Union]]
[[Category:Publications established in 1923]]
[[Category:Publications disestablished in 1929]]

[[be-x-old:ЛЕФ]]
[[fr:LEF]]
[[nl:LEF (tijdschrift)]]
[[ja:レフ (ロシア・アヴァンギャルド)]]
[[pl:LEF]]
[[pt:LEF]]
[[ru:ЛЕФ]]

Latest revision as of 03:00, 7 June 2024

LEF
The first two issues of the journal.
First issue1923; 101 years ago (1923)
Final issue1929; 95 years ago (1929)
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

LEF ("ЛЕФ") was the journal of the Left Front of the Arts ("Левый фронт искусств" – "Levy Front Iskusstv"), a widely ranging association of avant-garde writers, photographers, critics and designers in the Soviet Union. It had two runs, one from 1923 to 1925 as LEF, and later from 1927 to 1929 as Novy LEF ('New LEF').[1] The journal's objective, as set out in one of its first issues, was to "re-examine the ideology and practices of so-called leftist art, and to abandon individualism to increase art's value for developing communism."

Productivism

[edit]

Although LEF was catholic in its choices of writers, it broadly reflected the concerns of the Productivist left-wing of Constructivism. The editors were Osip Brik and Vladimir Mayakovsky: fittingly, one a Russian Formalist critic and one a poet and designer who helped compose the 1912 manifesto of Russian Futurists entitled, "A Slap in the Face of Public Taste". The covers were designed by Alexander Rodchenko, and featured photomontages early on, being followed by photographs in New LEF. Varvara Stepanova also designed covers.[2]

Among the writings published in LEF for the first time were Mayakovsky's long poem About This, and Sergei Eisenstein's The Montage of Attractions, as well as more political and journalistic works like Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry. The journal had funding from the state, and was discussed critically, but not unsympathetically by Leon Trotsky in Literature and Revolution (1924).

Factography

[edit]

The later New LEF ("Новый ЛЕФ" – "Novy Lef"), which was edited by Mayakovsky along with the playwright, screenplay writer and photographer Sergei Tretyakov, tried to popularise the idea of 'factography': the idea that new technologies such as photography and film should be utilised by the working class for the production of 'factographic' works. In this it had a great deal of influence on theorists in the West, especially Walter Benjamin and Bertolt Brecht. Linked journals also appeared such as the Constructivist architectural journal SA (edited by Moisei Ginzburg and Alexander Vesnin) and Proletarskoe Foto, on photography. The New LEF closed in 1929 over a dispute over its direction between Mayakovsky and Tretyakov, and under pressure for its 'Formalism', which jarred with the incipient Socialist Realism.

Some Contributors to LEF and Novy LEF

[edit]

The "Lenin issue"

[edit]

After Vladimir Lenin’s death on January 21, 1924, LEF’s first issue of the year dedicated its critical section to the Soviet leader (though the publication’s artistic prose and poetry were not Lenin-themed). These critical articles mainly focused on an analysis of Lenin’s writing and his oratory: this is because the Formalist critic Viktor Shklovsky independently organized the project [3] and presented it to LEF. Vladimir Mayakovsky did, however, contribute an unsigned editorial to the issue, in which he criticized the newly-forming habit of Soviet authorities to “canonize” Lenin by mass-producing commercial objects with his portrait or likeness on them. The editorial argued that this practice would undermine Lenin's significance for future generations. In Mayakovsky's words, “Don’t take away his living gait and human traits, which he was able to preserve as he guided history. Lenin is still our contemporary. He is among the living. We need him alive, not dead.” [CVS 148][4] The other articles do not explicitly develop this point, although they do focus on certain unusual, “human” particularities of Lenin's style.

In total, six writers contributed articles to the critical section of the issue. Their names and the titles of their works follow:

  • 1. Shklovsky - "Lenin as Decanonizer" («Ленин, как деканонизатор»)[5]
  • 2. Boris Eikhenbaum - "Basic Stylistic Tendencies in Lenin's Speech" («Основные стилевые тенденции в речи Ленина»)[6]
  • 3. Lev Yakubinsky - "On Lenin's Deflation of the High Style" («О снижении высокого стиля у Ленина[7]»)
  • 4. Yuri Tynyanov - "Lenin's Lexicon as a Polemicist" («Словарь Ленина-полемиста»)[8]
  • 5. Boris Kazansky - "Lenin's Speech - An Attempt at Rhetorical Analysis" («Речь Ленина: Опыт риторического анализа[9]»)
  • 6. Boris Tomashevsky - "The Construction of the Theses" («Конструкция тезисов»)[10]

All of these men either belonged to one of two Formalist collectives, OPOJAZ (The Society For the Study of Poetic Language) and the Moscow Linguistic Circle, or were associated with them. Accordingly, their contributions to this issue of LEF focus on Lenin's specific rhetorical techniques, and not on his broader historical or social importance, which is only alluded to in passing in the articles.[11] Since these authors share certain theoretical assumptions about language and rhetoric, moreover, the articles often overlap in the specific topics of their investigations, and produce a stable group of core conclusions about Lenin's style.

Defamiliarization: Defamiliarization, which can broadly be defined as the idea that the power of a work of art depends on how effectively it defies norms and subverts audiences’ expectations, is one of the most important and long-standing ideas in Formalist theory. It emerges as early as 1916, in Viktor Shklovsky's manifesto “Art as Device.”[12] It is therefore unsurprising that several of the articles explain Lenin's ability to communicate ideas effectively, an end he achieved through successfully “defamiliarizing,” or disrupting, stale, established revolutionary language. As Shklovsky writes, “His style consists in downplaying the revolutionary phrase, in replacing its traditional words with workaday synonyms.” [13] Tynyanov also pays attention to this aspect of Lenin's style, arguing that Lenin was always intently focused on whether or not the words that he was using at a given moment were “in sync” with the material realities that they were meant to describe, and that this attention to specificity was more important for Lenin than pretty-sounding turns of phrase.[14]

Lowering language: As a result of Lenin's defamiliarization, his speeches and writing begin to seem “artless” in their straightforwardness. Kazansky, along with others, acknowledges this explicitly: “Lenin’s discourse always comes across as direct, artless, even colorless and indifferent… but this is not so.” [15] The Formalists do not intend this to be a criticism of Lenin's rhetoric: they instead argue that his atypical style was a pragmatic and effective rhetorical device itself, one that both set Lenin apart from his contemporaries and rivals (e.g., Leon Trotsky) and convinced his audience of his sincerity: “Nobody suspects Lenin’s discourse of artificiality and pretentiousness: it is utterly pragmatic.” [16] Eikhenbaum and Shklovsky suggest that Lenin shares this quality with established writers, such as Tolstoy and Mayakovsky.[17] In his article, Yakubinsky uses the word “deflation” to describe Lenin's antipathy to the traditional high style of Russian oratory.

Polemics and parody: Another essential element of Lenin's success was his willingness to openly mock his enemies, both in print and in his speeches. Eikhenbaum and Tynyanov suggest that Lenin's constant criticism of writings from tsarists and those socialist parties that were opposed to the Bolsheviks helped him develop a unique, striking rhetorical voice, since he was careful to oppose his opponents both ideologically and stylistically: “Lenin’s polemic itself was a significant shift in the tradition and realm of Russian oratory and Russian journalism. In his analysis of his opponent’s lexicon, Lenin supplies all the typical traits of his own lexicon.” [18] Lenin not only avoided “flowery,” cliché phrases in his work, but also actively strove to introduce “rude,” everyday words and ideas into his writing. This was extremely uncommon at the time, and therefore made him more memorable as a rhetorician: “They appeal to everyday life, and link up with everyone’s daily, ubiquitous speech. Consequently, they extend the most solid, quantitatively and qualitatively mundane associative ties between speaker and listener.” [19] Tynyanov is especially interested in this aspect of Lenin's style: it is connected with his own interest in parody, which he believed to be the artistic device that spurred literary evolution and the development of new forms of art.[20]

Poetic devices in “prosaic” speech: Although the Formalists were sometimes accused by their opponents of being pure aesthetes, who were attempting entirely to separate art from reality,[21] their work on Lenin reveals that this charge was not entirely accurate. After all, Lenin's journalism and speeches were not art, as Eikhenbaum readily admits: “the realm of so-called practical language is extremely broad and varied… As for such forms as oration, despite its seemingly practical character, it is quite like poetic speech. Poetic speech is typified only by a particular attitude to discrete discursive elements and their specific use, especially in poetry.”[22] In this sense, the Lenin issue represents a turning point in Formalist thought. They are applying concepts originally devised for poetic analysis to “prosaic” work, which furthers their project by demonstrating that Formalism's theoretical concepts, like defamiliarization and parodic evolution, need not be restricted to the study of art.

Shklovsky's original interest in analyzing Lenin may have been prompted by the ongoing polemic between the Formalists and more orthodox Marxist critics, like Leon Trotsky.[23] The overall effect of LEF's Lenin issue is that Lenin is presented as deeply pragmatic, more interested in the day-to-day questions of maintaining Bolshevik power than in any larger ideal. Moreover, by presenting Lenin as an ironic, flexible thinker, the Formalists subtly appropriated the Soviet leader for themselves. For as Ilya Kalinin writes, “their engagement with the figure of Lenin, which was only beginning to be canonized but already possessed an exceedingly powerful symbolic significance and social charge, for the sake of providing themselves with additional, political legitimation for their conceptions about the nature of poetic language, led to far-reaching theoretical consequences.”[24]

Reactions to LEF's interpretation of Lenin have varied. Within the Soviet Union, it was received positively by the Futurist poet Aleksei Kruchenykh, who went on to write and publish his own analysis of Lenin's language in the following year, heavily citing the LEF critics in his work. The emigre poet Vladislav Khodasevich, conversely, stridently criticized the issue, claiming that it proved Shklovsky and his compatriots to be sycophants for the Communist government. However, although he found the critics’ language to be evasive, he admitted that their theoretical observations were justified.[25] The issue has received relatively little mention in the West: Victor Erlich refers to Lenin's rhetoric as an “essentially bleak” topic that did not merit the attention lavished upon it.[26] More recently, Boris Groys mentioned the issue in his book The Total Art of Stalinism, claiming that it served as an example of how the Soviet avant-garde inadvertently helped canonize Lenin after his death.[27] He does not, however, discuss the actual content of the articles.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Soviet Film 1920s: Translations from LEF, Novy LEF, Brik, Kuleshov, Shklovsky, Vertov. Mayakovsky Film Scenarios. Politics and Production: The work of Godard. Marinetti and Mayakovsky". Screen Volume. Vol. 12, no. 4.
  2. ^ Yablonskaya, M. N. (1971). Parton, Anthony (ed.). Women Artists of Russias New Age: 1900-1935. New York: Rizzoli. p. 153.
  3. ^ Eisen, Samuel (1996). "Whose Lenin Is It Anyway? Viktor Shklovsky, Boris Eikhenbaum and the Formalist-Marxist Debate in Soviet Cultural Politics (A View from the Twenties)". The Russian Review. 55 (1): 68. doi:10.2307/131910. JSTOR 131910.
  4. ^ Mayakovsky, Vladimir (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 148.
  5. ^ Shklovsky, Viktor. "Ленин, как деканонизатор".
  6. ^ Eikhenbaum, Boris. "Основные стилевые тенденции в речи Ленина".
  7. ^ Yakubinsky, Lev. "О снижении высокого стиля у Ленина".
  8. ^ Tynyanov, Yuri. "Словарь Ленина-полемиста".
  9. ^ Kazansky, Boris. "Речь Ленина: Опыт риторического анализа".
  10. ^ Tomashevsky, Boris. "Конструкция тезисов".
  11. ^ Tomashevsky, Boris (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 264.
  12. ^ Shklovsky, Viktor (1990). Theory of Prose. Dalkey Archive Press. pp. 1–15.
  13. ^ Shklovsky, Viktor (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 152.
  14. ^ Tynyanov, Yuri (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 212.
  15. ^ Kazansky, Boris (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 226.
  16. ^ Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. 2018. pp. 156, 227.
  17. ^ Eikhenbaum, Boris (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. pp. 170–1.
  18. ^ Boynik, Sezgin, ed. (2018). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. pp. 157, 215.
  19. ^ Tynyanov, Yuri (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 216.
  20. ^ Tynyanov, Yuri (2019). Permanent Evolution: Selected Essays on Literature, Theory and Film. Academic Studies Press. pp. 294–328.
  21. ^ Trotsky, Leon (2005). Literature and Revolution. Haymarket Books.
  22. ^ Eikhenbaum, Boris (2018). Boynik, Sezgin (ed.). Coiled Verbal Spring: Devices of Lenin's Language. Rab-Rab Press. p. 155.
  23. ^ Eisen, Samuel (1996). "Whose Lenin Is It Anyway? Viktor Shklovsky, Boris Eikhenbaum and the Formalist-Marxist Debate in Soviet Cultural Politics (A View from the Twenties)". The Russian Review. 55 (1): 68. doi:10.2307/131910. JSTOR 131910.
  24. ^ Kalinin, Ilya (2018). "Kak sdelan yazyk Lenina: material istorii i priem ideologii". Vestnik Sankt-Peterburgskogo Universiteta. Yazyk I Literatura. 15 (4): 607–8.
  25. ^ Khodasevich, Vladislav (2010). Polnoe sobranie sochinenii v 8 tomakh, vol. 2. Moscow: Russkii put. pp. 306–9.
  26. ^ Erlich, Victor (1994). Modernism and Revolution : Russian Literature in Transition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 220.
  27. ^ Groys, Boris (1992). The Total Art of Stalinism. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 68.

Sources

[edit]
  • Victor Osipovich Pertsov (1954), 'Mayakovsky and LEF', News of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Department of Literature and Languages, 1954, Volume 8, Issue 4