Authoritarian Laughter: Political Humor and Soviet Dystopia in Lithuania

Authoritarian Laughter: Political Humor and Soviet Dystopia in Lithuania

by Neringa Klumbyte
Authoritarian Laughter: Political Humor and Soviet Dystopia in Lithuania

Authoritarian Laughter: Political Humor and Soviet Dystopia in Lithuania

by Neringa Klumbyte

Hardcover

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Overview

Winner of the 2024 BASEES (British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies) Women's Forum.

Authoritarian Laughter explores the political history of the satire and humor magazine Broom published in Soviet Lithuania. Artists, writers, and journalists were required to create state-sponsored Soviet humor and serve the Communist Party after Lithuania was incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1940. Neringa Klumbytė investigates official attempts to shape citizens into Soviet subjects and engage them through a culture of popular humor.

Broom was multidirectional—it both facilitated Communist Party agendas and expressed opposition toward the Soviet regime. Official satire and humor in Soviet Lithuania increasingly created dystopian visions of Soviet modernity and were a forum for critical ideas and nationalist sentiments that were mobilized in anti-Soviet revolutionary laughter in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Authoritarian Laughter illustrates that Soviet Western peripheries were unstable and their governance was limited. While authoritarian states engage in a statecraft of the everyday and seek to engineer intimate lives, authoritarianism is defied not only in revolutions, but in the many stories people tell each other about themselves in jokes, cartoons, and satires.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501766688
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2022
Pages: 306
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.06(d)

About the Author

Neringa Klumbytė is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Russian and Post-Soviet Studies and Director of the Lithuania Program at the Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies at Miami University.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Authoritarian Laughter
1. Banality of Soviet Power
2. Political Intimacy
3. The Soviet Predicament
4. Censorial Indistinction
5. Political Aesthetics
6. Multidirectional Laughter
7. Satirical Justice
8. Soviet Dystopia
Post Scriptum: Revolution and Post-authoritarian Laughter
Conclusion: Lost Laughter and Authoritarian Stigma

What People are Saying About This

Julie Hemment

Drawing upon rich sources of data—from the archive to the interview—Authoritarian Laughter considers deep questions about agency and political responsibility in the Soviet era that continue to resonate today.

Bruce Grant

A great read. This book deftly explores the place of satire in government structures, an issue central to histories of the former USSR as well as to analytics of modern state power more broadly.

Dovile Budryte

Sophisticated and original, Authoritarian Laughter offers valuable insights into the ways in which power is felt and experienced in authoritarian regimes and a rich analysis of the power of humor in unfree societies.

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