Krasnaya Nov

Krasnaya Nov (Russian: Красная новь, lit. ''Red Virgin Soil'') was a Soviet monthly literary magazine[1]

Krasnaya Nov
The original brochure by the "Krasnaya Nov" Publishers
Editor-in-chiefAlexander Voronsky (1921–1927)
Alexander Fadeev (1931–1942)
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation15 thousand (1921)
45 thousand (1942)
First issueJune 1921
Final issueSummer 1942
Based inMoscow
LanguageRussian

History

Krasnaya Nov, the first Soviet "thick" literary magazine, was established in June 1921. In its first 7 years, under editor-in-chief Alexander Voronsky, it reached a circulation of 15,000 copies, publishing works of the leading Soviet authors, including Maxim Gorky, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Sergey Yesenin, as well as essays on politics, economics, and science by authors like Lenin, Stepanov-Skvortsov, Bukharin, Frunze and Radek, among others. In 1927, Voronsky was condemned as a Trotskist and fired. He was replaced first by Vladimir Vasilyevsky (summer 1927–spring 1929), then by Fyodor Raskolnikov (1929–1930), Ivan Bespalov (1930–1931), and Alexander Fadeyev (1931–1942), the latter bringing the circulation figures up to 45,000. In late 1941 the magazine was evacuated and in 1942 it closed for good.[2]

Krasnaya Nov had its own publishing house of the same name. Among its publications was Trotsky's brochure "New Course".

gollark: It's probably so they can mildly simplify their backend and/or do data mining and/or prepare everyone for some Bedrock-style "marketplace" of badness.
gollark: By "new and improved" they mean "hahaha you will have a Microsoft account now, this is not optional".
gollark: https://www.minecraft.net/en-us/article/java-edition-moving-houseThis seems quite bad.
gollark: The "summon large amounts of bees riding sheep" bit is easy enough, but it's feeding into a "disapionator" outside the big triangular base there, and someone somehow rigged it to draw in bees, kill them when they get near a central thing, and produce cool particle effects while doing so.
gollark: No, that was earlier.

References

  1. "Krasnaya Nov". The Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  2. "Krasnaya Nov". Literary Encyclopedia. 1931. Retrieved 1 November 2013.


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