Stephen Norris
Education
- PhD 2002, University of Virginia
- MA, University of Virginia
- BA, Millikin University
Teaching and Research Interests
- History of the Russian Empire
- Soviet Union
- Nationalism
- Propaganda
- Film and History
Work in Progress
My work studies nationalism and propaganda in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union during the 19th and 20th centuries. My current research project is entitled Communism's Cartoonist: The Extraordinary Lives and Deaths of Boris Efimov. Efimov (1900-2008) was the most significant political caricaturist in Soviet history. His career began in Civil War Ukraine when he was just a teenager before he moved to Moscow in 1922 and worked as a cartoonist for major Soviet publications such as Izvestiia and Krokodil. He continued to draw caricatures for them until the collapse of the USSR in 1991. Efimov, as my biography explains, lived at least four lives and suffered at least three deaths during his 108 years. It is also a biography of the Soviet experiment as well as a history of modern propaganda. Making use of Efimov’s personal archives in Prague and Moscow, I hope to rethink the conventions of the biographical genre and tell a story of not just one person, but an entire century.
In addition to this biography, I am also the co-lead scholar on an NEH-funded project, “.” Using an unparalleled collection of postcards produced during the Siege of Leningrad (1941-44) and held at the Blavatnik Archive in New York City, this project will result in the creation of an immersive website and in-depth look at how propaganda, art, and communication fused together during a time of total war.
Finally, I continue to collaborate on a project entitled “Creative Horizons: Art in the Post-Soviet Era.” Working with colleagues from the Melikian Center at Arizona State University and the Institute for Russian, European, and Eurasian Studies at the University of South Florida, “Creative Horizons” spotlights the work of artists in the former Soviet world. The Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has led us to focus on Ukrainian artistic resistance. You can find all the videos produced in the series on the . As part of this project, I have also produced three short videos in collaboration with videographer Ari Gajraj on the Ukrainian author , the Ukrainian filmmaker , and the Belarusian artist .
Courses Taught
- HST 206 Historical Inquiry
- HST 229 The World Wars
- HST 231 Genocides in the 20th Century
- HST/FST 252 History at the Movies
- HST 254 Introduction to Russian and Eurasian Studies
- HST 296 World History since 1945
- HST 330 A History of Ukraine
- HST 374 History of the Russian Empire
- HST 375 The Soviet Union and Beyond
- HST 428/528 History through Literature
Selected Publications
Books
- Stalingrad: Fedor Bondarchuk;(London: Intellect Books, 2022). [paperback and e-book versions].Part of the "” series.
- The History Painters: Art, History, and the Making of Russian National Identity (under contract with Bloomsbury, London and New York, forthcoming).
- Blockbuster History in the New Russia: Movies, Memory, Patriotism (Indiana University Press, 2012)
- Russian Translation. История российского блокбастера: Кино, память и любовь к Родине [The History of the Russian Blockbuster: Film, Memory, and Love for the Motherland] Translation by Nina Tsyrkin (Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie, 2024). With a new preface for the Russian edition.”
- A War of Images: Russian Popular Prints, Wartime Culture, and National Identity, 1812-1945 (Northern Illinois University Press, 2006)
Edited Volumes
- The Akunin Project: The Mysteries and Histories of Russia's Bestselling Author (co-edited volume with Elena Baraban). University of Toronto Press, 2021.
- Museums of Communism: New Memory Sites in Central and Eastern Europe (Indiana University Press, 2020)
- The City in Russian Culture (co-edited volume with Pavel Lyssakov). London: Routledge, 2018.
- Russia's People of Empire: Life Stories from Eurasia, 1500-Present (with Willard Sunderland, Indiana University Press, 2012)
- Insiders and Outsiders in Russian Cinema (with Zara Torlone, Indiana University Press, 2008)
- Preserving Petersburg: History, Memory, Nostalgia (with Helena Goscilo, Indiana University Press, 2008)
Book Series
- Co-editor, Russian Shorts series, Bloomsbury: .
Recent Articles
- “Caricatured Empire: Cold War Political Cartoons” in Joan Neuberger, Valerie Kivelson, and Sergei Kozlov, eds., Picturing Russian Empire (NY: Oxford University Press, 2023: 407-415).
- “Машина времени Гайдая: история, память и веселье в советские 1970-е [Gaidai’s Time Machine: History, Memory, and Hilarity in the Soviet 1970s]” in Jan Levchenko, ed., Человек с бриллиантовой рукой: К 100-летию Леонида Гайдая [The Man with the Diamond Arm: On the 100th Birthday of Leonid Gaidai] (Moscow: NLO, 2023): 144-161.”
- “Copying Cartoons: An Intimate History of the Stalinist Caricature” Experiment 28 (2022): 274-295.
- “Visual Reverberations” Russian Review 81/4 (October 2022): 620-23.
- “The Great Patriotic Serial: Shtrafbat [Penal Battalion], Historical Taboos, and the Beginnings of the New National Idea” in Sasha Prokhorov, Elena Prokhorova, and Rimgaila Salys, eds., Contemporary Russian Television (Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2021): 48-75.
- “War, Cinema, and the Politics of Memory in Putin 2.0 Culture” in Anton Weiss-Wendt and Nanci Adler, eds., The Future of the Soviet Past (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2021): 170-92.
- “The War Film and Memory Politics in Putin’s Russia” in David Hoffmann, ed., The Memory of the Second World War in the Soviet Union and Contemporary Russia (London: Routledge, 2021): 299-317.
- “Young Soldiers at Play: The Red Army Soldier as Icon” in Marina Balina and Serguei Oushakine, eds., The Pedagogy of Images: Early Soviet Children’s Books (University of Toronto Press, 2021): 445-466.
- “The Second World War, Soviet Sports and Furious Space Walks: Soft Power and Nation Branding in the Putin 2.0 Era” in Stephanie Dennison and Rachel Dwyer, eds., Cinema and Soft Power: Configuring the National and Transnational in Geo-Politics (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2021): 119-39.
- “Two Worlds: Boris Efimov, Soviet Political Caricature, and the Construction of the Long Cold War” in Aga Skrodzka, Xiaoning Lu, and Kasia Marciniak, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Communist Visual Cultures (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020): 519-541.
- “On Russian Cinema Going West (and East): Fedor Bondarchuk’s Stalingrad (2013) and Blockbuster History” in Andy Byford, Connor Doak, and Stephen Hutchings, eds., Transnational Russian Studies (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2020): 197-212.
- “Defenders of the Russian Land: Viktor Vasnetsov’s Warriors and Russia’s Bulwark Myth” in Heidi Hein-Kircher and Lilya Berezhnaya, eds., Rampart Nations: Bulwark Myths in East European Multiconfessional Societies in the Age of Nationalism (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2019): 319-343.
- “My Good Hans” in Rimgaila Salys, ed., The Russian Cinema Reader, Volume III. (Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2019): 344-361.
Online Articles
- “Soviet Media Downplayed the Significance of the D-Day Invasion” Article for The Conversation timed for the 80th anniversary of D-Day: .
- “A Ukrainian Artist Fights Russian Culture, One Painting at a Time.” The Moscow Times May 24, 2023:
- "Taras Shevchenko, Poet of Ukraine" in Origins: Contemporary Events in Historical Perspective (June 2022):
- “History, Memory, and the Art of Protest in Belarus” in Origins: Contemporary Events in Historical Perspective (February 2021). .
- “Top Ten Origins: World War II Films” in Origins: Contemporary Events in Historical Perspective (May 2019): .
- “Russia, America, and the Conspiratorial Worldview” in Origins: Contemporary Events in Historical Perspective 10/11 (August 2017): .
Selected Grants and Awards
- 兔子先生 University Distinguished Scholar Award, 2019
- 兔子先生 University College of Arts and Science Distinguished Educator, 2017
- 兔子先生 University Associate Student Government Outstanding Professor Award, 2006