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Cover of Soviet Humor

Soviet Humor

The Best of Krokodil

By Krokodil.

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Publish Date

May 1989

Publisher

Andrews Mcmeel Pub

Language

eng

Pages

192

Description:

This is a book of cartoons from the Soviet humor magazine *KROKODIL*, mainly from the Brezhnev-to-Gorbachev 1970s and 80s. It's fascinating to compare them, in terms of style and content, with their American counterparts in *The New Yorker* and *The National Lampoon*. A lot of the gags involve privations and bread lines, but there are also a lot of classical and mythological references. They don't try to be hip (one of the best cartoons is of a teacher trying a little to hard to relate to teenage students, with his skateboard, spiky hair, wraparound shades, and Heavy Metal t-shirt), and the sexual content is fairly chaste, if I recall correctly, more in the vein of *Punch* than *Playboy*. If you love magazine cartoons, this book is indispensable for its insights into the closing days of the USSR.

subjects1970s,  1980s,  magazine,  cartoons,  satire,  Soviet Union

PlacesRussia,  Soviet Union

Times1970-1990