Loading…

Loading grant details…

Completed H2020 European Commission

The historical-revolutionary museums of Petrograd-Leningrad, 1917–1941

€224.9K EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Jun 16, 2022
End Date Mar 28, 2025
Duration 1,016 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101029852
Grant Description

This project will analyse the formation of memory about the nineteenth-century revolutionary movement in Russia and the 1917 Revolution in a group of historical-revolutionary museums in Petrograd-Leningrad between 1917 and 1941.

The two decades after the October Revolution witnessed a transformation of the memory landscape, as Bolshevik leaders exploited the struggle to overthrow the old regime as an instrument of political legitimacy.

The scholarship has dealt extensively with the management of the revolutionary narrative from the top; however, key institutions involved in the governance of the recent past, particularly, museums, remain understudied. This pioneering study of museums will provide a unique view of how memory was shaped on the ground.

Petrograd-Leningrad is chosen for the analysis due to its status in the Soviet memory politics that of the city of three revolutions and the city of Lenin.

The historical-revolutionary museums explored here include the House Museum for the Memory of Freedom Fighters, the State Museum of the Revolution GMR, the Museum of Sergei Kirov, the Museum of Lenin in Leningrad, and a handful of smaller, short-lived museums such as the Museum of Komsomol and the Museum of the Army and the Fleet.

While scholarship claims that the Soviet state was steady in imposing the Bolshevik-centred memory project from 1917 on, I will show how a clash of seeming similar, yet different memory projects unfolded in all these museums.

The House-Museum and the GMR operated with a broad concept of the revolutionary movement that included all the antimonarchist political forces that had been active in the Russian Empire, not just the Bolsheviks.

This project withered only in the early 1930s ceding way to the Bolshevik-centred and then Lenin/Stalin-centred ones that emphasized the role of the Communist party and mythologized figures of Lenin and Stalin in designing the 1917 revolution to the detriment of all other participants.

All Grantees

The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford

Advertisement
Apply for grants with GrantFunds
Advertisement
Browse Grants on GrantFunds
Interested in applying for this grant?

Complete our application form to express your interest and we'll guide you through the process.

Apply for This Grant