Confiscated ed. Молот сатирический журнал № 2 1906 Molot The Hammer Revolution

Molot (The Hammer): Weekly Artistic-Literary and Satirical Journal. No. 2 (Ezhenedel'nyy khudozhestvenno-literaturnyy i satiricheskiy zhurnal), 1906. In Russian

$170.00
Skip to product information
Confiscated ed. Молот сатирический журнал № 2 1906 Molot The Hammer Revolution
1/5

Molot (The Hammer): Weekly Artistic-Literary and Satirical Journal. No. 2 (Ezhenedel'nyy khudozhestvenno-literaturnyy i satiricheskiy zhurnal), 1906. In Russian

$170.00

[Конфискованное издание] «Молот» : Еженедельный художественно-литературный и сатирический журнал. № 2.
Санкт-Петербург : Тип. т-ва «Общественная польза», 1906.
8 с. : ил.; 38×29 см. Редакторы: К. И. Диксон, Н. Н. Герардов.
В иллюстрированной издательской обложке.
***
[Confiscated publication] "Molot" (The Hammer): Weekly Artistic-Literary and Satirical Journal. No. 2 ("Molot": Ezhenedel'nyy khudozhestvenno-literaturnyy i satiricheskiy zhurnal. № 2).
St. Petersburg: Tip. t-va "Obshchestvennaya polza", 1906.
8 pp. : ill.; 38×29 cm. Editors: K. I. Dikson, N. N. Gerardov.
In publisher's illustrated cover.

This is the second and final issue of the short-lived but significant satirical weekly "Molot" (The Hammer), published in St. Petersburg in 1906 at the height of the First Russian Revolution. The journal's editorial board included K. I. Dikson and N. N. Gerardov, and its pages featured works by notable writers and satirists of the Silver Age, including Sasha Chyorny, Fyodor Sologub, Skitalets, Andrei Chapygin, and D. Tsenzor. The fate of this issue exemplifies the harsh repression of the free press during this turbulent period: immediately after its release, the entire print run was confiscated by court order, criminal proceedings were initiated, and the publication was permanently shut down. The official pretext was the publication of a story titled "Mints. Prints. Drints", deemed seditious by the authorities. Editor K. I. Dikson was imprisoned as a result. As a primary source documenting the clash between burgeoning public satire and autocratic censorship, this large-format journal, surviving against all odds, represents a bibliographic rarity and a poignant historical artifact of revolutionary-era Russia.

You may also like

Searching for a Specific Title?

If the book or item you are looking for is not currently in our collection, please do not hesitate to contact us.
We will be happy to assist in locating it. Simply provide the title, author, year, edition, or any other relevant details.
We will search our resources and respond promptly.

Contact Us