“What does revolution require of writers, artists, photographers, and filmmakers? With extraordinary archival diligence and theoretical intelligence, Fore recovers a fascinating array of nearly lost experiments that address this question more radically than ever before or since. Revealed here are unprecedented strategies to document the factuality of a transformed world as immediately as possible––to document it without arresting it but, on the contrary, by dynamizing it anew. This study of ‘reality in revolution’ in the Soviet Union is the perfect complement to Fore’s equally masterful survey of ‘realism after modernism’ in Germany during the same period. It is also, tacitly, a powerful riposte to the purveyors of deceit and disinformation in our own time.”
— Hal Foster, Princeton University
“Remarkable. Through an intricately woven combination of intellectual history and theoretical analysis, Fore presents Soviet factography as a daring experiment in capturing the experience of revolutionary time. A work of sophisticated argumentation that combines deep research with intellectual breadth, theoretical dexterity, and a lively style, Soviet Factography will be required reading for anyone concerned with early Soviet culture, European modernism, Marxist and materialist aesthetics, and the theory of documentary.”
— Edward Tyerman, author of "Internationalist Aesthetics: China in and Early Soviet Culture"
“Has there ever been such an efflorescence of artistic and technical experimentation as in the Soviet years surrounding 1930? This brief and shining moment, in which everything seemed possible, has found its interpreter in Fore. Those wanting to understand, and maybe break, the fact-morphing media worlds we inhabit today will find both congenial ancestors and a brilliant guide here to think with.”
— John Durham Peters, Yale University
“Soviet Factography is a brilliant, fascinating, and essential work. Jam-packed with original research and nuggets of insight, it is a monumental achievement and a major intellectual event. Fore brings to life a crucial movement in the 1920s, recreating the excitement and the intense debates among writers, artists, and intellectuals who were engaged in the projecting of building a new communist society. He carefully describes the emergence of factography, in all its political-intellectual-aesthetic inventiveness and urgency. It’s thrilling work.”
— Jonathan Flatley, Wayne State University, author of "Like Andy Warhol"