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・ Revolutionary Left Union
・ Revolutionary Left Wing
・ Revolutionary Liberation Army of Azawad
・ Revolutionary Liberation Movement Tupaq Katari
・ Revolutionary Mariateguist Party
・ Revolutionary martyr
・ Revolutionary Martyrs' Cemetery
・ Revolutionary Marxist Current
・ Revolutionary Marxist Group (Canada)
・ Revolutionary Marxist Group (Ireland)
・ Revolutionary Marxist League
・ Revolutionary Marxist League (Hong Kong)
・ Revolutionary Marxist Party
・ Revolutionary Marxist Workers Party
・ Revolutionary Marxist–Leninist League
Revolutionary Mass Festivals
・ Revolutionary Middle Class
・ Revolutionary Military Council
・ Revolutionary Mongolia tank brigade
・ Revolutionary movement
・ Revolutionary Movement 13th November
・ Revolutionary Movement 8th October
・ Revolutionary movement for Indian independence
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Groups
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Movement
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (Honduras)
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (Puerto Rico)
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Movement–Alliance
・ Revolutionary Nationalist Movement–Julio
・ Revolutionary Nuclei


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Revolutionary Mass Festivals : ウィキペディア英語版
Revolutionary Mass Festivals
Revolutionary Mass Festivals (in Russian массовые праздники), or Mass Spectacles, were participatory, staged cultural events held in the Soviet Union. They were held during the period of the Russian Civil War following the October Revolution of 1917. Experimental in nature, they united the Marxist-Leninist ideology of re-education of the masses and the aesthetics of the Russian avant-garde. The revolutionary mass festivals built upon the tradition of fairs and carnivals, and were part of the subsequently institutionalized public holidays and their official celebration in the Soviet Union. In contrast to these earlier versions of public festivals, the early revolutionary mass festival was often produced ad hoc without a distinct guideline. However, they became crucial events in the active construction of historical myths.
== Pre-revolutionary predecessors ==

Staged or semi-staged mass festivals have a long history dating back as far as to the ancient Saturnalia, medieval carnivals and mystery plays. They were appropriated by the French Revolution, with the first event of its kind being the funeral parade for Voltaire, which Jacques-Louis David organized in 1791.
Russia too shared a tradition of public festivals. On the one hand, parades were organized by the state on the occasion of coronations and in order to commemorate events of political or military significance, such as the victory over Napoleon in 1812 or bicentennial anniversary of the foundation of Saint Petersburg held in 1903. On the other hand, the Russian Orthodox liturgical calendar included annual religious processions (in Russian крестные ходы). Finally, strike marches, illegal May Day celebrations and funeral marches for fallen revolutionaries were a central element of the revolutionary movement since the 1890s. The Soviet mass festival draws heavily on these traditions, since they not only commemorate central events of political history but, by representing a new anti-religious ideology, they also assume and replace the spiritual position formerly held by the church.

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