Admission requirements
BA degree in Russian Studies, Slavic Languages and Cultures, or Linguistics, reading knowledge of Russian is required.
Description
Although the breakup of the Soviet Union itself was a relatively peaceful event, the decade that followed it saw plenty of military action both in the Russian Federation and in other former Soviet republics (Georgia, Moldova). Even today the frozen conflicts of Abkhazia, Transnistria and Chechnia are powerful reminders of the chaos of the 1990s when the viability of the Commonwealth of Independent States was often questioned and the Russian Federation nearly qualified as a “failed state.”
For the majority of Russian citizens it wasn’t geopolitics, however, but the struggle for survival that mattered most. Owing to the declining demand for Russian products in the former satellite states (and in Russia itself), factories were closed down leading to skyrocketing unemployment figures. Even those people who did not lose their jobs sometimes had to wait for months before they got their salaries paid. And then there was another scourge of Russian society: ubiquitous crime, a phenomenon that was traditionally associated with the capitalist West, but now turned out to be very much part of the new post-communist Russia.
It’s not surprising that the Putin regime has sought to legitimize itself partly by exploiting the unfavorable reputation of the 1990s as a time of chaos and national humiliation. However, this constant “demonization” of the 1990s cannot obscure the fact that the decade also had a few things going for itself: a national parliament that functioned reasonably well; genuine freedom of expression in the media (in the pre-internet age!) and topless girls presenting the weather forecast. Today a considerable number of Russians who were then in their twenties remember the period with remarkable fondness.
While not completely ignoring the political developments of the first post-Soviet decade, this course is mainly about its cultural expressions and the changes in everyday life. What happened to the moral prestige of the Russian writer (and his income!) after the abolishment of censorship? How did (s)he remain relevant in a media landscape that was increasingly dominated by pulp fiction and investigative journalism? What did the arrival of McDonalds in Russia do to Russian fast food? How enduring were the successes of biznes lanch and russkii bistro? What was the fate of Russian film comedy when the film industry was going through an unprecedented crisis? Finally: how are the 1990s remembered and by whom? These are just a few of the questions we will address in a course that is situated on the crossroads of history, semiotics and cultural studies.
Course Objectives
To examine received notions on the 1990s as a time of chaos and destitution
To familiarize ourselves with the key players of the 1990ss and their literary and cinematographic texts;
To acquire a better understanding of the political and social context in which these texts were produced and received;
To become better readers and better viewers
Timetable
Mode of instruction
Seminar
Course load
Total 280 hrs (10EC)
Class 26 hrs
Literature research 100 hrs
Reaction papers 40 hrs.
Midtermpaper 50 hrs
Final paper 64 hrs.
Assessment method
Reaction papers, written summaries, oral presentations, performance in class: 20%
Midterm paper (4000-5000 words): 40%
Final paper (4000 – 5000 words): 40%
Blackboard
Blackboard will be used.
Please submit your papers and other written assignment electronically by uploading them through Turnitin (Blackboard
Reading list
Registration
Enrolment through uSis is mandatory.
General information about uSis is available in English and Dutch
Registration Studeren à la carte and Contractonderwijs
Registration Contractonderwijs
Contact information
For questions about the content of the course, you can contact the teacher:
Dr. O.F. Boele
Coordinator of Studies: mw. drs. T. Bouma
Administrations Office: van Wijkplaats
Remarks
The seminar is a one-term course comprising 12-14 meetings of two hours (in the case of a film screening four hours).