Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Those Satirical Russians


On the Beinecke Library blog, they discuss Russian satirical magazines.

From the story...

When the first Russian Revolution broke out in 1905, writers and artists leapt at the chance to fill the void opened by the sudden collapse of censorship. No less than 309 new satirical magazines started publication during the brief window of 1905/1906, though most survived only for a few issues before being shut down and (in many cases) their editors being put in prison. The lavish use of color illustration make these underground papers a startling document of the intellectual ferment, but also the artistic sophistication of a milieu that suddenly had the opportunity to express itself boldly and in the public domain.

1 comment:

C. Omunista said...

Prison for satirists!