This article examines some of the theoretical issues that exercised Sergei Eisenstein during the years 1920–1924 when he worked in the Russian Proletarian Cultural-Educational Organization (Proletkult), of which Aleksandr Bogdanov was one of the founders. We ask how far Eisenstein was influenced by Marxism in general and by the ideas of Bogdanov in particular, and explain his exit from the Proletkult in terms of the unacceptability of his theory and practice of theatre and film to the Chairman of the Proletkult, Valeriyan Pletnëv. During these years the Agitprop Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, at Lenin’s behest, was taking steps to reduce the scope of activities of the Proletkult, discredit Bogdanov as a thinker, and exclude him from politics.
Keywords
- Lunacharskiy
- Lenin
- Meyerhold
- Pletnëv
- Strike
- Proletkult Theatre
“There are two specific trends that I Eisenstein, letter to his mother, 4 January 1921. Bulgakowa 2001a: 24.
“A polemic. An unequal combat between an individual and an organization (it was yet to be dethroned for its claims to have a monopoly on proletarian culture). At any moment, the matter could turn into ‘persecution’… I was threatened with unpleasant things by the Proletkult.” Eisenstein 1997: 111–113; Taylor and Powell 1995: 147–148.
In this paper, individual terms used by Eisenstein or other writers, as well as quotations from their works, are indicated by double inverted commas.
The years during which Eisenstein worked under the aegis of the Proletkult were years during which he developed his “theory of attractions” and applied the theory in his earliest theatrical and first film productions. On the evolution of Eisenstein’s theories, see Clark 1995: 179–181; Bulgakowa 2001c: 38–51; 2014: 423–448 and 2022: Chapter 3. For accounts of Eisenstein’s work in the Proletkult, see Hielscher 1973 and Mally 1990: 240–241.
“… an aggressive moment in theatre, i.e., any element of it that subjects the audience to emotional or psychological influence, verified by experience and mathematically calculated to produce specific emotional shocks in the spectator in their proper order within the whole. These shocks provide the only opportunity of perceiving the ideological aspect of what is being shown, the final ideological conclusion …” (Taylor 2010: 34). Yurenev, citing S. Yutkevich, notes that Eisenstein seized upon the term
In “Montage of Film Attractions” (1924), Eisenstein argued that this theory was also applicable to film, which, he claimed, shared with the theatre the purpose of “ Emphasis in original.
The sources that Eisenstein drew upon for his understanding of reflexology were Vladimir Bekhterev (1857–1927) For Eisenstein’s reference to Bekhterev, see “Montage of Film Attractions”, in Taylor 2010: 49 and, for his use of the term ‘reflexology’, “The method of making a workers’ film” (August 1925), in Taylor 2010: 68. On Bekhterev’s influence on Eisenstein’s thinking see Olenina 2020, 195–235. Pavlov is mentioned in “Through the Revolution to Art: Through Art to the Revolution” (1933) in Taylor 2010,:243. Here, Eisenstein also mentions the influence of Freud. In 1926 Eisenstein declared that “My artistic principle was, therefore, and still is, not intuitive creativity, but the rational constructive composition of effective elements; the most important thing is that the effect must be calculated and analysed in advance”.
During the years 1921–1922, when he was working within the Proletkult, Eisenstein was also attending the “theatrical technical school” of Vsevolod Meyerhold where lectures on biomechanics were delivered by Nikolay Bernstein, and it is clear that his interest in the physiology and psychology of human movement originated or further developed at this time (Hoover 1974: Bulgakowa 2001a: 26; Bulgakowa 2014: 427; Braun 1995: 172–177). In “Montage of film attractions” (1924) he claimed to be making his own contribution in this field: “The norms of organicism … for motor processes have been established partly by French and German theoreticians of movements (investigating kinetics in order to establish motor primitives) and partly by me (kinetics in its application to complex expressive movements and the dynamics of both) … in my laboratory work in the Proletkult Theatre” (Taylor 2010: 51). On the theoretical and practical work of the First Workers’ Theatre see Leach 1994: 151–161. For a fuller account of Eisenstein’s adaptation of the ideas of these thinkers, see Bulgakowa 2001b: 175–178; and Bulgakowa 2014: 428–429. The Central Labour Institute was headed by Aleksey Kapitonovich Gastev (1882–1939), a former ‘proletarian poet’ and a disciple of Frederick Winslow Taylor, the pioneer of the “scientific organization of labour. In 1921, Bernstein had founded a biomechanics laboratory in the Central Institute of Labour. See Bulgakowa 2001a: 26. According to Edward Braun, the programme of Meyerhold’s ‘theatrical-technical school’ drew upon the ideas of William James, Bekhterev, Pavlov, Taylor and Gastev (Braun 1995: 172–177).
Eisenstein’s applications in the First Workers’ Theatre of the Proletkult (where he worked in collaboration with Sergei Tretyakov) of the methods and techniques he had learned in the school of Meyerhold have been well described in Hielscher 1973, Hoover 1974, Gordon 1978 and Leach 1994. Here we shall focus upon what Eisenstein described as being his main purpose in applying scientific and aesthetic techniques on the stage and in film, namely to achieve the desired propaganda effect, or, as one scholar has put it, to “organize the cognition of the spectators” (Tikka 2009: 229). Indeed, we learn from an interview of 1928 that one of the modules of his Teaching and Research Workshop was devoted to “Ideological Expressiveness” – “the problem of the transition of film language from cinema figurativeness to the cinematic The other two modules were devoted to “Human Expressiveness” and “Montage Expressiveness”. For the range of connotations acquired by ‘attraction’ and ‘montage’ in the later theoretical writings of Eisenstein, see Bulgakowa 2001c: 41 and passim.
There is no ‘programmatic’ Marxism in The relatively open membership policy of the Proletkult and the eclecticism of its activity in the arts are well described in Fitzpatrick 1970 and Mally 1990.
A key message of
In Eisenstein described the ideas expressed by him in See “The problem of the materialist approach to form” (1925) in Taylor 2010: 59–61; and Bulgakowa 2001a: 47–48. On the aspirations of the Proletkult to an independent role in workers’ education, inside Soviet Russia and internationally, see Biggart 2018.
The completion of His works included According to a “Repertoire of the Workers’ Theatre of the Proletkult” published in Pletnëv 1921b, it would appear that Pletnëv 1923. In 103 pages, Pletnëv outlines the history of the gold industry in Russia and of the company
In December 1920, Pletnëv had succeeded Pavel Lebedev-Polyanskiy as Chairman of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Proletkult, Lebedev-Polyanskiy had helped found the Proletarian University and had been Secretary of the International Bureau of the Proletkult. He claimed to have been a “dedicated defender of the idea of proletarian culture, proletarian science, proletarian art, proletarian literature.” See his autobiography in See the minutes of the Plenum of the Central Committee of 16–20 December 1920 and 15–20 May 1921 in Proceedings of the Second Conference of the Moscow Proletkult (March 1919), RGALI, f.1230, l. 140. A year earlier, Lebedev-Polyanskiy had expressed the more nuanced view that socialist intellectuals could be “temporary helpers”, but the cultural influence they brought to bear should be carefully scrutinized. In the final analysis, only the proletariat could “resolve” ( In 1922 he wrote that the class consciousness of the proletariat was “alien to the peasant, the bourgeois, the intellectual (
In March 1921, in the Second Central Studio of the Proletkult, On the network of Proletkult theatre studios, 1920–1923, see Leach 1994: 71. According to both Yurenev and Leach, whilst Smyshlyaev was formally the director of The production of Yurenev reproduces one of Eisenstein’s graphics for this play. See also Leach 1994: 162 & 199; and Bulgakowa 2001a: 31. Smyshlyaev had been a pupil of Konstantin Stanislavskiy in the Moscow Arts Theatre. See Yurenev 1985: 42; and Bulgakowa 2001a: 31. On this adaptation by Sergey Tret’yakov of Aleksandr Ostrovskiy’s According to a report in
By this time, Eisenstein and the neo-Futurist playwright and critic, Sergey Tretyakov, saw themselves as the principal source of theatrical innovation in the Proletkult. After Anatoliy Lunacharskiy was at this time the Commissar for Education. On his conservative policies regarding the theatre and Platon Kerzhentsev’s ‘leftist’ critique of his plays, see Fitzpatrick 1970: 139–161. Aleksandr Tairov was the founder and producer-director of the Kamernyy Theater, “famous for its highly stylized productions of exotic decadent plays and multi-level decorative scenery” (Bulgakowa 2001a: 283).
Not only artistic, but also party-political factors were involved in Eisenstein’s departure from the Proletkult. By 1924, both Pletnëv and the Proletkult were coming under increasing pressure from the Agitprop Department of the Central Committee of the RK (b) and this may help to explain why Pletnëv felt he could no longer take the risk of harbouring within the Proletkult such a maverick as Eisenstein.
In September 1922, Pletnëv had felt able, in an article in See Pletnëv, “Na ideologicheskom fronte”, Yakovlev, “O ‘proletarskoi kul’ture’ i Proletkul’te”, For Lenin’s sarcastic annotation of the article by Pletnëv, see Yakovlev, “O ‘proletarskoi kul’ture’ i Proletkul’te”, Yakovlev, “O ‘proletarskoi kul’ture’ i Proletkul’te”, Judging by Yakovlev’s article, Yakovlev, “O ‘proletarskoi kul’ture’ i Proletkul’te”,
Yakovlev’s denounced not only the Proletkult’s conception of theatre but also its assumption that its methods were specific to a proletarian phase of cultural development: the Proletkult, in its theses “On the tasks of the proletariat in physical culture”, had proclaimed that “the new physical culture of the proletariat consists of the psycho-physiological education of the qualified individual.” This ignored the fact that it the bourgeoisie was also organizing sport for the masses, and organizations like Yakovlev, “O ‘proletarskoi kul’ture’ i Proletkul’te”,
Yakovlev’s diatribe was not aimed solely at Pletnëv; indirectly he sought to disparage Aleksandr Bogdanov and Nikolay Bukharin, one of the Communist Party’s leading Marxists, who had in some respects been influenced by Bogdanov. Bukharin, whose ideas on culture owed something to Bogdanov, asserted at a conference convened by the Central Committee in February 1925, that Lenin, through the article of Yakovlev, had been criticizing not only the Proletkult but also himself. See Bukharin 1925 (4): 265; and Biggart 1992: 131–158. Bogdanov was not re-elected to the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Proletkult in December 1920, but remained a member of the Central Committee. See the minutes of the Central Committee of the Proletkult and of its Presidium for the period December 1920 to May 1920 in RGALI, f.1230 and in Yakovlev, “Men’shevizm v Proletkul’tovskoy odezhde”, V. I. Lenin & G. V. Plekhanov 1923. This episode is dealt with in Biggart 1990 (3): 265–282.
Given that the public campaign against Bogdanov coincided with Eisenstein’s period of activity within the Proletkult, and given the closeness of Eisenstein’s working relationship with Pletnëv, Eisenstein could hardly have been ignorant of the fact that Bogdanov was now an outcast. Not all leading party officials ostracized Bogdanov. He continued to be highly regarded by Bukharin, Krasin and others. In December 1925, the Commissar for Health, Nikolay Semashko, supported the founding of Bogdanov’s Institute for Blood Transfusion. Stalin was well disposed towards Bogdanov during his lifetime. Lenin’s anathematization of Bogdanov was taken up by Stalin after Bogdanov’s death in 1928, which is doubtless one explanation why, even in his memoirs of 1946, Eisenstein makes no mention of Bogdanov. Pletnëv now claimed that whereas he, Pletnëv, was engaged in “practical work”, Bogdanov was an abstract theorist. Bogdanov’s theory that proletarian culture was “socialist culture in the process of development” was identical to that of Trotskiy (Pletnëv 1924b: 37).
Relations between Eisenstein and Pletnëv approached their nadir when, in mid-November 1924, Eisenstein refused to participate in a component of the planned programme of the Workers’ Theatre that included two plays by Pletnëv. His departure from the Proletkult soon followed. In January 1925 he gave his reasons in separate interviews published in
In Eisenstein’s vocabulary “theatrical” was, of course, a term of contempt, but his criticism of the Proletkult ranged more widely: in
In
In 1933, Eisenstein wrote that his “personal research and creative work” had from the outset been accompanied by a “study of the founders of Marxism” (Taylor 2010: 244), but in his writings of the 1920s there are only passing and, it sometimes seems, dutiful references to ‘materialism’, ‘collectivism’, ‘organization’ and the ‘dialectic’. Neither in his memoirs, nor in any of his theoretical works, does he give any indication that he was influenced by Bogdanov. Sergey Mikhailovich Eisenstein (1898–1948) wrote his memoirs in 1946. The complete text was published in Russia only in 1997.
Mikhail Yampolskiy, citing V. Zabrodin, has referred to a debate in the Proletkult during which Eisenstein called for a struggle for “1) the organized society… 2) the organized human being”, and has detected “behind these formulae … the Proletkultist-Bogdanovist ‘Tektology’, the science of organization” (Yampolskiy 2005). Yampolskiy is mistaken in identifying the Proletkult exclusively with Bogdanov and both with iconoclasm. See Yampolskiy 2005: 49.
The theatre critic, Platon Kerzhentsev, who spoke at the First Conference of the Proletkult in September 1918 and became a member of the editorial board of Kerzhentsev’s See E.B. Koritskiy, “Pervye stranitsy NOT”, in
Did Bogdanov’s theory of the social function of art influence Eisenstein’s ‘theory of attractions’? For Eisenstein, “the theatre’s basic material derives from the audience: the moulding of the audience in a desired direction (or mood) …” (Taylor 2010: 33–36). For Bogdanov, the function of art was both cognitive and educational: “firstly, to organize a particular sum of the elements of life, of ‘experience’; and, secondly, to ensure that what is created serves as an instrument for a particular collective”. “O khudozhestvennom nasledstve’”(1918), in Bogdanov 1924/1925: 150. See, for example, “The method of making a workers’ film” (1925), in Taylor 2010: 65–66.
In the case of one writer who was close to Eisenstein, there is a more evident affinity with the ideas of Bogdanov. The critic Boris Arvatov, who for some time worked as an ‘academic secretary’ in the Proletkult and who had collaborated in the production of On Arvatov, see Lodder 1983: 239; Zalambani 1999; Bulgakowa 2001a; and Chehonadskih 2018). See Arvatov 1925; Kiaer 1997: 105–118; and Albera 1990: 179–184. From materials in the Bogdanov Family Archive we know that Arvatov borrowed books on scientific subjects from Bogdanov.
Arguably, Eisenstein was enunciating a similar theory in 1924, when he wrote that, just as the movements of animals, structured in strict accordance with organic laws and unaffected by the “rational principle” were photogenic, and just as the labour processes of workers which flowed in accordance with these laws had been shown to be photogenic, so a successful realization by the actor and director of a montage (assembly) of movements that were purely organic in themselves would be the most photogenic, “in so far as one can define ‘photogenic’ by paraphrasing Schopenhauer’s good old definition of the ‘beautiful’.” In this example Eisenstein’s “level of organization” is the degree of approximation of the actor and director to organic movement. He goes on to express his appreciation of the uniforms of the Japanese General Staff, and of working clothes (e.g., a diving suit), as “functional forms” that can be considered “photogenic” (Taylor 2010: 56–57). Here, as with Arvatov, we have a functionalist aesthetic that is cognate with, if not identical to, Bogdanov’s “whatever raises the level of organization of collective life … in perceptions of the world (
In an interview of 1926, Eisenstein denied that there had been any conflict in his relations with his working class associates in the Proletkult: “At that time, these workers were in complete agreement with my artistic views and requirements, although I really belonged to another class and had come to the same point of view only through purely theoretical analysis.” His exasperation had been with the artistic conservatism of the Proletkult leadership (Taylor 2010: 74). In a diary entry for 24 February 1927 Eisenstein made it clear that by November 1924 he had had enough of what he disparagingly refers to as “theatre”: ‘I did not want to do theatre in the Proletkult; I wanted to design new templates to solve experimental problems – Agit-revues (
Eisenstein’s career was not damaged by his departure from the Proletkult; if anything, the contrary. In January 1925 he declared that he was not willing to collaborate with the Proletkult in the next seven parts of a film series on the ‘Dictatorship’, for which the Proletkult had the contract (Eisenstein 1925c). But that same month the Commissar for Education (and cultural ‘conservative’), Anatoliy Lunacharskiy, invited him to make a film celebrating the twentieth anniversary of the revolution of 1905 under the direct auspices of Other members of the committee were Malevich, Meyerhold, Pletnëv, Shutko, Krasin and the First Secretary of the Moscow City Committee of the RKP (b), Vasiliy Mikhaylov. See Yurenev 1985: 106–109. On this episode see Bulgkowa 2001a: 53, 56.
That the relationship between Sergei Eisenstein and the Proletkult, under Pletnëv’s leadership, would become confrontational was, in retrospect, entirely predictable. As Biggart and Bulgakowa make clear, in providing more background on Pletnëv’s emergence as a dramatist than is customary, his life experience and his thematic preoccupation with strikes and worker self-organisation were entirely consonant with the ideals of Proletkult – more so, indeed, than the experience of its founder, the physician and polymath Aleksandr Bogdanov. Just as predictable, with historical hindsight, was Lenin’s move in 1920 to stem the influence of Proletkult, leading to a period when it was tolerated as a purely cultural organisation, subsumed within Narkompros.
Biggert and Bulgakowa provide an admirably detailed account of the doctrinal and political issues at stake during this transitional period, which can be characterized as allowing ‘doctrinal pluralism’ and eclecticism. But beneath such analysis, we can see a number of other factors at work, which might be termed social and personal elements. They point to the clear class hostility between Pletnëv and Eisenstein, a worker who had become a cultural-political leader, and a precocious young intellectual, making his way in theatre. Despite the fact that both had been influenced by Bogdanov’s ideas, it had become politic not to allude to these openly, even if we can see clear traces of such ideas in the ‘workerism’ of both
Eisenstein’s solution to the complex and treacherous political situation of the mid-1920s following Lenin’s death was to stress the ‘scientific’ direction of his work – hence, the revealing diary entry quoted from 1927: ‘I did not want to do theatre in the Proletkult; I wanted to design new templates to solve experimental problems’. Drawing on an eclectic combination of behavioural and biological sciences to justify his ‘experiments’ would become a theoretical justification for what were, in truth, distinctly avant-garde impulses. From our expanding knowledge of Eisenstein’s interests and infatuations, we must surely recognize that he was much more intuitive, and indeed eclectic, than he was willing to admit. It shouldn’t be disloyal to admit that he was extremely adept at rationalising his impulses, and indeed covering his tracks within the dangerous world of Soviet cultural politics. What I draw from Biggert and Bulgakowa’s surefooted analysis of the ‘Proletkult period’ is a better understanding of how Eisenstein used the ‘pluralism’ of the early 1920s to gain experience, to push against boundaries, and indeed to advance his reputation. Despite the very real tensions, both sides benefited from the work of this period and its lasting impact.
Eisenstein’s ‘Magic of Art’ Sharing in Action: The Systemic Concept of the Environment in Aleksandr Bogdanov Eisenstein’s ‘Cinema of the Masses’ Somatic Montage for Immersive Cinema Aleksandr Bogdanov and Sergei Eisenstein on Emotions: The Affectional, the Theory of Expressiveness, and the Emotional Script Seiwert’s ‘Open Letter’ to Bogdanov Aleksandr Bogdanov’s Podbor and Proletkult: An Adaptive Systems PerspectiveCultural Science Meets Cultural Data Analytics Aleksandr Bogdanov’s Tektology: A Proletarian Science of Construction Aleksandr Bogdanov, ‘Science and the Working Class’ Aleksandr Bogdanov and Lenin on “Things-In-Themselves” Interview as Archive: Moving in Disciplinary Space from Cultural Studies to Cultural Science. An Interview with John Hartley AM Towards a Tektology of Tektology Biosemiotic Foundations of a Darwinian Approach to Cultural Evolution Tangential Points: Aleksandr Bogdanov and Sergei Eisenstein Revisited The Culture as System, the System of Culture: Aleksandr Bogdanov on Proletarian Culture and Proletarian Art Aleksandr Bogdanov’s Concept of Culture: From Workers’ Circles to the Proletkult Movement Special Thematic Section “Eisenstein, Bogdanov, and the Organization of Culture”: Guest Editorial Introduction Aleksandr Bogdanov’s Sociology of the Arts Sergei Eisenstein’s System Thinking: Influences and Inspirations Knowledge as Film vs. Knowledge as Photo: Alternative Models in Early Soviet Thought Sergei Eisenstein in the Proletkult