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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Date: Thu, Jul 9, 2020 at 12:33 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-SHERA]: Taroutina on Reischl, 'Photographic
Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors'
To: <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Cc: H-Net Staff <revh...@mail.h-net.org>


Katherine M. H. Reischl.  Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands
of Russian Authors.  Ithaca  Cornell University Press, 2018.  320 pp.
 $49.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-5017-2436-7.

Reviewed by Maria Taroutina (Yale-NUS College)
Published on H-SHERA (July, 2020)
Commissioned by Hanna Chuchvaha

Katherine Reischl's eloquent new monograph examines the complex and
multivalent ways in which some of Russia's leading authors understood
and engaged with the novel medium of photography. The book begins
with the 1860s and runs roughly through to the late 1930s, with the
conclusion focusing on the post-World War II works of Vladimir
Nabokov and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Reischl traces the chronological
evolution of photography as a technological, cultural, and visual
medium, while simultaneously analyzing a diverse set of authorial
word-image strategies that were employed by key literary figures at
specific historical junctures. Each discrete case study is
contextualized within a dense network of political, ideological,
cultural, and theoretical concerns surrounding questions of modern
subjectivity, authorial authenticity, and visual and literary
representation, all of which evolved with and responded to the
continuously shifting environment of late imperial and early Soviet
Russia. Throughout the course of the book, Reischl attends to the
numerous connections and continuities between individual authors and
projects, carefully scrutinizing their cross-temporal dialogues
across several decades.

The book opens with the late nineteenth century and a consideration
of Lev Tolstoy's exponentially growing authorial celebrity and the
manner in which it was further augmented by the proliferation of the
photographic medium, so much so that the writer's frequently
reproduced image became an important visual emblem for his entire
epoch. The chapter also investigates the subtle and pervasive
influence that photography exerted on Tolstoy's writing and
highlights several instances of the author's "camera eye" at work in
his various novels, such as _The Cossacks_ (1863) and _Anna Karenina_
(1878). It culminates with a discussion of Tolstoy's "crisis of
authorship" and the intense dispute that broke out over his copyright
and literary legacy between his wife, Sofia, and his chief disciple,
Vladimir Chertkov, with the latter prevailing so that Tolstoy's image
ultimately became "the property of the public sphere" (p. 51) at the
same time that photography was recognized in Russia as an artistic
medium in its own right.

The second chapter similarly interrogates the photographic and
literary experimentations of the novelist, short-story writer, and
playwright Leonid Andreev and, to a lesser degree of Silver Age
authors Vasilii Rozanov and Maksimilian Voloshin. Here Reischl
emphasizes the idiosyncratic and generative intersections between
Andreev's public persona and the intimate images of his domestic
life, which he photographed himself and strategically deployed as
visual extensions of his fictional, literary worlds, whose esoteric,
demonic themes mirrored photography's liminal ability to connect the
realms of the living and the dead. Reischl contends that through the
active fusion of "life writing and light writing as method" (pp.
15-16) writers like Andreev, Rozanov, and Voloshin embraced a novel
form of creative modernist intermediality that became integral to the
very "formation of [their] literary imagination[s]" (p. 17).

The ensuing two chapters shift their attention to the Soviet era and
survey the different ways the regime harnessed photographic processes
and documentary writing toward forging a new Soviet citizenry and
socialist state. Photography was employed on a large scale as both a
pedagogical and agitational tool, with many "author-photographers"
rising to the task at hand throughout the 1920s and 1930s. The third
chapter specifically bridges the pre- and postrevolutionary epochs by
exploring the documentary writing and photography of the Symbolist
ethnographer and diarist Mikhail Prishvin, who strove to renegotiate
and rebrand his authorial subjectivity in the wake of the Bolshevik
Revolution and the novel demands of Soviet society. Mikhail Prishvin
advanced the hybrid new genre of the _ocherk_, which united text and
image in a mutually generative dialectical relationship_. _Comparing
his prerevolutionary publication _The Land of Unfrightened Birds_
(1907), with the later 1934 edition by the same title, as well as the
infamous _History of the Construction of the White Sea-Baltic Canal
_(1934), Reischl demonstrates how Prishvin's project aimed to fuse
the self with nature and actively resisted the materialist aesthetics
of Aleksandr Rodchenko, Dziga Vertov, and Sergei Tretiakov, while
nonetheless dynamically reflecting the transformations in Russia both
in the natural and constructed realms.

The fourth chapter considers Soviet representations of the capitalist
West. More precisely, it analyzes Ilya Ehrenburg's experimentations
with oblique urban views created using a lateral viewfinder in his
seminal publication _My Paris_ (1933) and Ilya Ilf's striking
invention of a novel hybrid genre of the "photo-story," or
_fotoraskaz_, in his 1936 _American Photographs _series. As with
previous chapters, the fourth one lingers on the complex
interrelations between text and image and their ability to
dialectically encode Soviet alterity--and by extension implied
superiority--to the West with its many societal and political ills
that these "photo-stories" sought to expose. Lastly, the conclusion
examines the memoirs of émigré writers Vladimir Nabokov and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, whose transgressive, revisionist reclamations
of history "unwrite" the official photographic, political, and
ideological accounts of the Soviet regime.

Overall, the book is clearly and lucidly written and incorporates a
wealth of rich archival detail that gives real texture and historical
palpability to the narrative. It is also replete with sensitive and
astute visual analyses of individual images and objects, as well as
compelling formal readings of entire photo series. For example, in
the second chapter, Reischl masterfully foregrounds the materiality
of Andreev's and Rozanov's family photo albums, emphasizing the
handwritten pencil notations on the photographs' grainy surfaces and
the traces of glue still visible on their reverse sides, testifying
to their discrete existence as tangible, unique objects. Indeed,
Reischl powerfully and persuasively interweaves the multiple thematic
and conceptual strands of the book with the real historical
conditions and lived realities of the individual
"author-photographers" under discussion, adroitly moving between
their micro and macro settings. In addition to her insightful
explications of the particular conditions of the photographs' and
photo series' creation, display, and dissemination, Reischl also
devotes considerable attention to their reception and theorization in
relation to new technologies and contemporary media theory, providing
a robust conceptual and methodological framework through which to
read and understand these layered composite works.

While _Photographic Literacy_ undoubtedly makes a significant
contribution to the fields of literary and Slavic studies, it also
has important implications for a number of other subject areas, such
as art history, visual culture, and media theory. In fact, one of the
book's most salient features is its impressive interdisciplinarity
and the manner in which it tells a sophisticated "interart" story
that combines the textual and the visual, literature and art history,
technology and aesthetics, documentation and design, and fact and
fiction--an approach which is gaining increasing momentum in Russian
and Slavic studies and which builds on important precedents, such as
Molly Brunson's _Russian Realisms: Literature and Painting, 1840-1890
_(2016), Michael Kunichika's _"Our Native Antiquity": Archaeology and
Aesthetics in the Culture of Russian Modernism_ (2015), and Colleen
McQuillen's _The Modernist Masquerade: Stylizing Life, Literature,
and Costumes in Russia_ (2013).[1] Akin to these studies,
_Photographic Literacy_ challenges the entrenched logocentricity of
Russian culture and the continued privileging of its literary
tradition above the visual, musical, and performing arts. On the
contrary, it shows how the literary was deeply imbricated and imbued
with the visual (and especially the photographic), determining and
fashioning "the authorial self." It thus further develops many of the
key issues raised by Brunson in _Russian Realisms_, but does so from
the unusual and fascinating perspective of the photographic pursuits
of the writers themselves.

Moreover, by including figures whom we do not typically associate
either with nineteenth-century discoveries and technological advances
in photography or with twentieth-century breakthroughs in avant-garde
aesthetics, _Photographic Literacy_ dramatically expands the familiar
field of inquiry. It juxtaposes celebrated literary and artistic
figures, such as Lev Tolstoy, Aleksandr Rodchenko, and Dziga Vertov,
with lesser-known actors, such as Mikhail Privshin and Vladimir
Griuntal. In doing so, the book engenders numerous discursive
matrices within which to understand and engage with the
"author-photographer" phenomenon and provocatively postulates fresh
and defamiliarized modes of thinking about well-trodden avant-garde
territory and canonical cultural practitioners. For instance, in her
third chapter Reischl examines how artists and writers from a range
of backgrounds and of different stylistic and philosophical
persuasions collectively worked on the _USSR in Construction_
project, thus nuancing the persistent notion of a single, monolithic
totalitarian vision that we habitually attribute to the Stalinist
1930s. Rather than rehash the same set of arguments and
interpretations around pioneering individuals and movements,
Reischl's textured account offers a refreshing alternative and
important corrective to the established histories of Soviet
photography. She provides a broader birds-eye view on the multiple
and pervasive ways documentary photography penetrated and shaped
everyday life and public consciousness in the first two decades of
the Soviet state, influencing both the outlook and subjectivity of
regular people as much as those of prominent writers and art
practitioners. Additionally, the book adopts a wide-ranging
territorial reach and incorporates a series of disparate locales and
"microgeographies" such as Yasnaya Polyana, Karelia, and Tashkent,
not to mention Finland, France, and the United States, further
refracting and "decentering" any notion of a consistent, homogenous,
or dominant representational modality of imperial and Soviet space.

Lastly, Reischl challenges the established periodization and
chronological divides typically associated with the modern period in
Russia by discussing the various continuities--and not only
ruptures--between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the
tsarist and Soviet periods. She cogently shows how
turn-of-the-century figures such as Prishvin continued to work well
into the 1930s and identifies striking visual parallels between his
images of the White Sea Canal in the second, 1934 edition of _The
Land of Unfrightened __Birds_ and Dziga Vertov's film stills,
demonstrating how certain formal and thematic developments of the
Silver Age continued to reverberate well into the Stalinist period.
Such a compelling revision of the chronological, geographical,
conceptual, and material frames of reference in debates on Russian
and Soviet modernity and its textual and pictorial representation has
been gaining increasing traction in the field as evidenced by a
series of recent publications such as_ New Narratives of Russian and
East European Art: Between Traditions and Revolutions, _edited by
Galina Mardilovich and Maria Taroutina_ _(2020), _Rethinking the
Russian Revolution as Historical_ _Divide_, edited by Matthais
Neumann and Andy Willimott_ _(2018), and _Across the Revolutionary
Divide, 1861-1945_, by Theodore Weeks (2011). _Photographic Literacy_
makes an important and original contribution to this ongoing
scholarly dialogue and will likely be of equal interest to
specialists of Russian literature, visual culture, and intellectual
history, as well as those more generally curious about the complex
and multivalent intermedial connections between texts and images in
modernity.

Note

[1]. For a discussion of the "interart" concept and intellectual
history, see Molly Brunson, _Russian Realisms: Literature and
Painting, 1840-1890 _(DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press,
2016), 3-25; Ulla Britta Lagerroth, Hans Lund, and Erik Hedling,
eds., _Interart Poetics: Essays on the Interrelations of the Arts and
Media_ (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1997); and W. J. T. Mitchell, _Iconology:
Image, Text, Ideology_ (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1986).

Citation: Maria Taroutina. Review of Reischl, Katherine M. H.,
_Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors_.
H-SHERA, H-Net Reviews. July, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54688

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




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