Adventures in the Soviet Imaginary: Russian Children's Books and Graphic Art in the University of Chicago Library
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Transportation: Human and Machine

Vozdushnye rabotniki
1. Click images to enlarge.

During the twentieth century, an influx of new technologies piqued the interest of adults and children alike with the rise of rapid transit, the expansion of railroad and shipping lines, and the advent of automobiles and commercial airplanes. Picture books and storybooks about train engines and boats became popular throughout the world.

Sometimes Western children’s stories were adapted for Soviet use, as in 40 Nord 50 Vest (Item 2, 1931), which adapts Rudyard Kipling’s poem “Forty North Fifty West.” The power of the  train to overcome distance is dramatized in Nisson Abramovich Shifrin’s fold-out book Poezd idet (A Train Is Coming, Item 3).

Books like illustrator Vladimir Aleksandrovich Tambi’s Vozdushnye rabotniki (Workers of the Air, Item 1) presented information about the new technologies and their benefits for contemporary society. Other examples used animated machinery to tell a story.

The Little Engine that Could, (Item 5) a tale that developed into a religious phenomenon, was first published in a magazine in 1906. It became a cultural archetype through the 1930 pseudonymous edition with Lois Lensky’s illustrations and the subsequent 1954 edition with illustrations by George and Doris Hauman. The little blue engine’s famous line “I think I can” succinctly captures the theme of empowerment.

Published that same year in the Soviet Union, with a text by Daniil Kharms, an author now known for his absurdist poetry and drama, Igra (Play, Item 4) tells the story about three little boys who transform themselves imaginatively into an automobile, a mail barge, and a Soviet airplane. The illustrations discourage the reader from thinking that the boys’ transformation is literal. But Kharms’s words themselves are ambiguous about the nature of the transformation. When the boys encounter a cow, a palpable tension arises between the children’s imagination and the cow’s undeniable, implacable materiality:

Hey,
cow,

you,

cow,

don’t come here,

cow,

don’t go along
the road,

don’t go along the path.


“Watch out!” shouted Mishka.

“Step aside!”
shouted Vaska.
“Go away!” shouted Petka,
and the cow walked away.
They ran,

they ran
to the bench

by the gate,
the barge
with the automobile
and the Soviet
airplane,

the airplane

with the automobile
and the mail barge.

Both The Little Engine that Could and Kharms’ Play animate new technologies and encourage excitement and interest in the liberating nature of new machines. At the heart of both of these stories is the empowerment of a young reader who, through identifying with the technology, will become a more powerful member of society. 

by Kathryn Duda

 

Items in Exhibition:

  1. A. Savel'ev. Vozdushnye rabotniki (Workers of the Air). Illus. by Vladimir Aleksandrovich Tambi. Leningrad: OGIZ, 1934.
  2. Rudyard Kipling. 40 nord—50 west (40 North 50 West). Illus. by David Shterenberg. Moscow: OGIZ "Molodaia gvardiia", 1931.
  3. Nisson Abramovich Shifrin. Poezd idet (A Train Is Coming). Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe izdatel'stvo, 1929.
  4. Daniil Kharms. Igra (Play). Leningrad: Gosudarstvennoe izd-vo, 1930.
  5. Watty Piper. The Little Engine That Could. Illus. by Lois L. Lenski. New York: Platt & Munk, 1930. Copyright © 1930 by Platt & Munk Co., Inc. (now part of the Penguin Group) renewed 1957. The Little Engine That Could, I Think I Can, and all related titles, logos, and characters are trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
40 Nord 50 Vest 2.
Poezd idet 3.
Igra 4.
The Little Engine That Could 5.
Soviet Children’s Books
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