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ISBN: HB: 9780300207637

Yale University Press

December 2014

480 pp.

23.4x15.6 cm

61 black&white illus.

HB:
£63,00
QTY:

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Like a Bomb Going Off

Leonid Yakobson and Ballet as Resistance in Soviet Russia

Everyone has heard of George Balanchine. Few outside the USSR know of Leonid Yakobson, Balanchine's contemporary, who remained in Lenin's Russia and survived censorship during the darkest days of Stalin. Like Shostakovich, Yakobson suffered for his art and yet managed to create a singular body of revolutionary dances that spoke to the Soviet condition. His work was often considered so culturally explosive that it was described as "like a bomb going off". Based on untapped archival collections of photographs, films and writings about Yakobson's work in Moscow and St. Petersburg for the Bolshoi and Kirov ballets, as well as interviews with former dancers, family and audience members, this illuminating and beautifully written biography brings to life a hidden history of artistic resistance in the USSR through this brave artist, who struggled against officially sanctioned anti-Semitism while offering a vista of hope.

About the Author

Janice Ross, a professor in the Theatre and Performance Studies Department and Director of the Dance Division of Stanford University, is the former dance critic for the Oakland Tribune. She lives in Atherton, CA.

Reviews

"Peerless: a heartbreaking account of the distance between a choreographer's intentions and their staged realizations, a page-turning story of one Promethean life, and the most revealing of cultural studies about ballet's perversion by politics" – Mindy Aloff, editor, "Leaps in the Dark: Art and the World by Agnes de Mille"