The cultural revolutions of the 20th century: rupture with the traditional culture or its continuation?
Автор: Petrova Irina Aleksandrovna, Avkhodeeva Evgeniya Andreevna
Журнал: Logos et Praxis @logos-et-praxis
Рубрика: Философия
Статья в выпуске: 1 (21), 2014 года.
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The article studies classical cultural revolutions of 20th century from the perspective of attitude to traditional culture. These revolutions include the Cultural Revolution in Soviet Russia, in Nazi Germany, as well as the later Great Cultural Revolution in China. They have some common features: all of them took place in totalitarian societies and were organized by higher authorities as forced, in relation to traditional culture, political reforms. These reforms often represented open destruction of cultural legacy. The theory of cultural revolutions implied the abolition of cultural elite and the creation of absolutely new culture. This aim was supposed to be achieved by influencing the individuals consciousness, so the cultural reforms were often seen as the process of mass consciousness manipulation where the government administrated by means of implicit ideology and provoked the situation of nonreflex organized approval of the majority. However, authors come to conclusion, that despite of the seeming originality of revolutionary reforms, they could not be realized, if they were based on the transmission mechanisms, established by traditional culture experience. These mechanisms, rooted at the level of mass consciousness and collective mental ideas, were used in the course of uneven political and cultural reforms.
Cultural revolution, traditional culture, the translation mechanism of cultural heritage, mass consciousness, collective mental representations
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/14974612
IDR: 14974612