This special thematic section of
The Tangential Points conference was convened to reflect upon apparent similarities between the systemic thinking of Eisenstein and Bogdanov, as hypothesized in
We do not know whether Bogdanov and Eisenstein ever met, but during the early years of the Soviet régime their ideas found expression in the Russian Proletarian Cultural-Educational Organization, the Proletkult. This was an extra-curricular institution that sought to create a new ‘proletarian culture’ by fostering the values of collectivism through tuition in philosophy, literature, theatre, the graphic arts and the sciences. After the October Revolution, institutions based on the Proletkult sprang up in a number of Western European countries.
An economist, culturologist, science fiction writer and experimental haematologist, Bogdanov was the principal theorist of the Proletkult (1917–32). In what he considered to be his key work,
The career of Sergei M. Eisenstein was very different. During his life, and to an even greater degree after his death, he had an enormous impact not only on Soviet film culture but on film culture throughout the world. The Proletkult, which sought to educate the proletarian masses in the values of collectivism, was an important post-revolutionary framework for the young film director and theoretician.
Guest Editorial Board: Pia Tikka (Editor-in-Chief ), John Biggart, Vesa Oittinen, Simona Poustilnik, Giulia Rispoli, Maja Soboleva
AA. Bogdanov in about 1905–1906, police photo. Courtesy of Simona Poustilnik. Photograph discovered by Simona Poustilnik in the State Archive of the Russian Federation (GARF)

Sergei M. Eisenstein writing an article (perhaps on the intellectualcinema) in his room at Chistye Prudy house. 1929. Photographer unknown. Courtesy by Eisenstein Center, Moscow

Pia Tikka / commentary: Steve Anderson / commentary: Nadejda Grigorieva TANGENTIAL POINTS: ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV AND SERGEI EISENSTEIN REVISITED
John Biggart & Oksana Bulgakowa / commentary: Ian Christie SERGEI EISENSTEIN IN THE PROLETKULT
Oksana Bulgakowa / commentary: Pietro Montani SERGEI EISENSTEIN’S SYSTEM THINKING: INFLUENCES AND INSPIRATIONS
Lyuba Bugaeva / commentary: Sergey Ogudov ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV AND SERGEI EISENSTEIN ON EMOTIONS: THE AFFECTIONAL, THE THEORY OF EXPRESSIVENESS, AND THE EMOTIONAL SCRIPT
Clea Waite / commentary: Szilvia Ruszev SOMATIC MONTAGE FOR IMMERSIVE CINEMA
Giulia Rispoli / commentary: Arran Gare SHARING IN ACTION: THE SYSTEMIC CONCEPT OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV
Simona Poustilnik / commentary: Carlo Rovelli ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV’S TEKTOLOGY: A PROLETARIAN SCIENCE OF CONSTRUCTION
Peter Dudley / commentary: Örsan Şenalp ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV’S PODBOR AND PROLETKULT: AN ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE
Fabian Tompsett / commentary: Redas Dirzys TOWARDS A TEKTOLOGY OF TEKTOLOGY
Vesa Oittinen / commentary: Antti Hautamäki / commentary: Pietro Omodeo ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV AND LENIN ON ‘THINGS-IN-THEMSELVES’
Jutta Scherrer / commentary: David Rowley ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV’S CONCEPT OF CULTURE: FROM WORKERS’ CIRCLES TO THE PROLETKULT MOVEMENT
Maja Soboleva / commentary; Frances Nethercott THE CULTURE AS SYSTEM, THE SYSTEM OF CULTURE. ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV ON PROLETARIAN CULTURE AND PROLETARIAN ART
Daniel Steila / commentary: Evgeni V. Pavlov KNOWLEDGE AS FILM VS. KNOWLEDGE AS PHOTO: ALTERNATIVE MODELS IN EARLY SOVIET THOUGHT
John Biggart / commentary: Christopher J.Read ALEKSANDR BOGDANOV’S SOCIOLOGY OF THE ARTS
Franz Seiwert, ‘AN OPEN LETTER TO COMRADE BOGDANOV’ (1921), translation and introduction Fabian Tompsett
Sergei Eisenstein, ‘CINEMA OF THE MASSES’ (1925), translation Richard Abraham, introduction Oksana Bulgakowa and John Biggart
Sergei Eisenstein, ‘THE MAGIC OF ART’ (1947), translation and introduction Julia Vassilieva
Aleksandr Bogdanov ‘SCIENCE AND THE WORKING CLASS’, translation and introduction Fabian Tompsett

