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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Diane P. KoenkerPublisher: Cornell University Press Imprint: Cornell University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.907kg ISBN: 9781501710674ISBN 10: 1501710672 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 15 September 2017 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsReviews"""In the early years of the Soviet era, vigorous outdoor activity held sway as a restorative and as a repudiation of the pleasure-filled, hotel-bound vacations favored in the West. Gradually, the regime made room for health sanatoriums and vacation travel, although still guided by 'scientifically planned and purposeful activities.' Ironically, these changes began in 1927, on the eve of Stalin's brutal collectivization of agriculture and first five-year plans. Koenker, with discriminating thoroughness, traces the evolution of Soviet vacationing from that point through the mid-1980s... This is well-told history, a portrait of life in the Soviet Union that will be recognizable to those who lived it.""-Robert Legvold, Foreign Affairs (November/December 2013) ""This solidly researched history of tourism concerns rest and recreation for the masses as well as outings by more privileged groups... The book should interest historians and social scientists of the Soviet Union, as well as specialists of tourism elsewhere since she compares Soviet programs with Western tourism."" - Jeffery Brookes, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (April 2014) ""Diane Koenker presents a fascinating picture of the off-hours of workers in the proletarian state... Koenker combines institutional, social, cultural, identity, and gender history in a superb tale of tourism in the Soviet Union that will be useful to scholars in any of those fields. Additionally, Club Red seems especially well suited to classes on the postwar Soviet experience or comparative courses on the post-1945 world, and chapters would productive and enjoyable discussion material in undergraduate classes""- Tricia Starks, The Russian Review (April 2014) ""While adding a fresh perspective to the already rather extensive literature on Stalinist consumption, Koenker's work breaks substantial new ground in this account of late socialism and its reforms of consumption and consumerism, on which only a tiny number of archive-based studies yet exist. It also lays a foundation for scholars to investigate this important aspect of the Soviet experience from other perspectives and using other methodologies, including oral history ... this ambitious, wide-ranging but still remarkably rigorous study will be of relevance and value to scholars of every period of Soviet history."" -Polly Jones,Slavic Review (2014) ""Club Red, Diane Koenker's excellent new book on Soviet vacation travel, adds to a countercurrent that has gathered force in the past few years. Viewed from the perspective of vacations-or, in other recent works, of automobiles, moviegoing, television, or circuses-the divisions between the NEP, Stalin, and especially Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Gorbachev periods often seem less sharp than we had previously imagined. Without ignoring repression, works in this vein elucidate aspects of ""normal Soviet life"" that previous scholarship had tended to obscure.""-Julie Hessler,The Journal of Modern History(September 2015) ""Club Red's scope is impressive; Diane P. Koenker covers tourism and vacations from the Soviet Union's beginnings to its dissolution. In so doing, she describes how tourism and vacations both reflected and contributed to the transformation of Soviet society from a spartan and productivist proletarianism to the Soviet version of the 'good life.' Because Koenker situations Soviet vacations and tourism within the broader history of the role of consumerism and tourism in modern societies, Club Red's appeal will extend well beyond scholars and students of Soviet history.""-Shelley Baranowski, Distinguished Professor of History, The University of Akron, author of Strength through Joy: Consumerism and Mass Tourism in the Third Reich ""This impeccably researched, percipient, and engaging book is an excellent new addition to Cornell University Press's outstanding Russian and Soviet history list. Following Soviet tourists from sumptuous neoclassical 'rest homes' on the Black Sea to mule trains, from ocean liners to hitchhiking, Diane P. Koenker's Club Red explores the paradoxes of leisure time spent to 'the rule of the bell,' and, conversely, the contradictions of activities in which therapeutic and socializing regimes were offset by the quest for fun and romance. Representing Soviet institutions and 'Soviet identity' from a novel angle, the book shows how turizm took people to locations outside ordinary space and time; it makes an important contribution to the new spatial history as well as to the history of everyday life and social relations.""-Catriona Kelly, University of Oxford, author of Children's World: Growing Up in Russia, 1890-1991 ""Skillfully crafted, smartly written, meticulously researched, and historiographically new and important, Club Red is vintage Koenker. The author deftly dissects the paradox of how and why an authoritarian state preaching collectivist principles promoted the individual autonomy and selfhood of its citizens through vacation travel, how they lived their lives under socialism, and what this all means.""-Donald J. Raleigh, Jay Richard Judson Distinguished Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill ""From the recuperative rest homes of the 1920s to the 'wild' tourism of the 1970s, vacationing in the Soviet Union was meaningful business. In this exemplary piece of research, Diane P. Koenker shows how much the nonproductive side of life has to tell us about all aspects of the Soviet experience.""-Stephen Lovell, King's College London, author of Summerfolk: A History of the Dacha, 1710-2000" In the early years of the Soviet era, vigorous outdoor activity held sway as a restorative and as a repudiation of the pleasure-filled, hotel-bound vacations favored in the West. Gradually, the regime made room for health sanatoriums and vacation travel, although still guided by 'scientifically planned and purposeful activities.' Ironically, these changes began in 1927, on the eve of Stalin's brutal collectivization of agriculture and first five-year plans. Koenker, with discriminating thoroughness, traces the evolution of Soviet vacationing from that point through the mid-1980s... This is well-told history, a portrait of life in the Soviet Union that will be recognizable to those who lived it. -Robert Legvold, Foreign Affairs (November/December 2013) This solidly researched history of tourism concerns rest and recreation for the masses as well as outings by more privileged groups... The book should interest historians and social scientists of the Soviet Union, as well as specialists of tourism elsewhere since she compares Soviet programs with Western tourism. - Jeffery Brookes, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (April 2014) Diane Koenker presents a fascinating picture of the off-hours of workers in the proletarian state... Koenker combines institutional, social, cultural, identity, and gender history in a superb tale of tourism in the Soviet Union that will be useful to scholars in any of those fields. Additionally, Club Red seems especially well suited to classes on the postwar Soviet experience or comparative courses on the post-1945 world, and chapters would productive and enjoyable discussion material in undergraduate classes - Tricia Starks, The Russian Review (April 2014) While adding a fresh perspective to the already rather extensive literature on Stalinist consumption, Koenker's work breaks substantial new ground in this account of late socialism and its reforms of consumption and consumerism, on which only a tiny number of archive-based studies yet exist. It also lays a foundation for scholars to investigate this important aspect of the Soviet experience from other perspectives and using other methodologies, including oral history ... this ambitious, wide-ranging but still remarkably rigorous study will be of relevance and value to scholars of every period of Soviet history. -Polly Jones,Slavic Review (2014) Club Red, Diane Koenker's excellent new book on Soviet vacation travel, adds to a countercurrent that has gathered force in the past few years. Viewed from the perspective of vacations-or, in other recent works, of automobiles, moviegoing, television, or circuses-the divisions between the NEP, Stalin, and especially Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Gorbachev periods often seem less sharp than we had previously imagined. Without ignoring repression, works in this vein elucidate aspects of normal Soviet life that previous scholarship had tended to obscure. -Julie Hessler,The Journal of Modern History(September 2015) Club Red's scope is impressive; Diane P. Koenker covers tourism and vacations from the Soviet Union's beginnings to its dissolution. In so doing, she describes how tourism and vacations both reflected and contributed to the transformation of Soviet society from a spartan and productivist proletarianism to the Soviet version of the 'good life.' Because Koenker situations Soviet vacations and tourism within the broader history of the role of consumerism and tourism in modern societies, Club Red's appeal will extend well beyond scholars and students of Soviet history. -Shelley Baranowski, Distinguished Professor of History, The University of Akron, author of Strength through Joy: Consumerism and Mass Tourism in the Third Reich This impeccably researched, percipient, and engaging book is an excellent new addition to Cornell University Press's outstanding Russian and Soviet history list. Following Soviet tourists from sumptuous neoclassical 'rest homes' on the Black Sea to mule trains, from ocean liners to hitchhiking, Diane P. Koenker's Club Red explores the paradoxes of leisure time spent to 'the rule of the bell,' and, conversely, the contradictions of activities in which therapeutic and socializing regimes were offset by the quest for fun and romance. Representing Soviet institutions and 'Soviet identity' from a novel angle, the book shows how turizm took people to locations outside ordinary space and time; it makes an important contribution to the new spatial history as well as to the history of everyday life and social relations. -Catriona Kelly, University of Oxford, author of Children's World: Growing Up in Russia, 1890-1991 Skillfully crafted, smartly written, meticulously researched, and historiographically new and important, Club Red is vintage Koenker. The author deftly dissects the paradox of how and why an authoritarian state preaching collectivist principles promoted the individual autonomy and selfhood of its citizens through vacation travel, how they lived their lives under socialism, and what this all means. -Donald J. Raleigh, Jay Richard Judson Distinguished Professor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill From the recuperative rest homes of the 1920s to the 'wild' tourism of the 1970s, vacationing in the Soviet Union was meaningful business. In this exemplary piece of research, Diane P. Koenker shows how much the nonproductive side of life has to tell us about all aspects of the Soviet experience. -Stephen Lovell, King's College London, author of Summerfolk: A History of the Dacha, 1710-2000 Author InformationDiane P. Koenker is Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of Republic of Labor: Russian Printers and Soviet Socialism, 1918-1930 and Club Red: Vacation Travel and the Soviet Dream, and is the coeditor of Turizm: The Russian and East European Tourist under Capitalism and Socialism, all from Cornell. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |