Andrey Yurganov, "Soviet Literature and Stalin (20s - early 30s)" Moscow; St. Petersburg: Center for Humanitarian Initiatives, 2024

The monograph by Andrei Yurganov, Doctor of Historical Sciences, contains no such fiction, but it is devoted to almost the same ideological component of literature, and is a compelling read. Perhaps because the transformation of the role of literature is more compelling than any detective story. How did Comrade Stalin come to lead the literary front? What role did books and plays play in the construction of socialism in a particular country? What is the general line of Bolshevik morality, what is the "dialectic of the creative process," and why did the Cult of Error arise? In his answers, Yurganov reveals the fundamental ideas of a bygone era.
“To become a proletarian writer, one must not only be one by birth, but also master dialectics…”

