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Brutal concrete hotels, futurist TV towers, heroic statues of workers--this collection of Soviet-era postcards documents the uncompromising landscape of the Eastern Bloc through its buildings and monuments. These are interspersed with quotes from prominent figures of the time, which both support and confound the ideologies presented in the images.0In contrast to the photographs of a ruined and abandoned Soviet empire we are accustomed to seeing today, the scenes depicted here publicize the bright future of communism: social housing blocks, palaces of culture and monuments to comradeship. Dating from the 1960s to the 1980s, they offer a nostalgic yet revealing insight into social and architectural values of the time, acting as a window through which we can examine cars, people and, of course, buildings. These postcards, sanctioned by the authorities, were intended to show the world what living in communism looked like.0Instead, this postcard propaganda inadvertently communicates other messages: outside the House of Political Enlightenment in Yerevan, the flowerbed reads "Glory to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union"; in Novopolotsk, art-school pupils paint plein air, their subject a housing estate; at the Irkutsk Polytechnic Institute students stroll past a 16-foot-tall concrete hammer and sickle. These postcards are at once sinister, funny, poignant and surreal.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Postcards, Brutalism (Architecture), Architecture, Pictorial works, History, Architecture, soviet unionPlaces
Eastern Europe, Soviet UnionTimes
20th centuryEdition | Availability |
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Brutal Bloc post cards: Soviet era postcards from the Eastern Bloc
2018
in English
0995745528 9780995745520
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- Created May 31, 2019
- 5 revisions
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December 17, 2022 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
October 11, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
August 13, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
June 6, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
May 31, 2019 | Created by MARC Bot | Imported from marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary MARC record |