Dr Claire Shaw
Associate Professor in the History of Modern Russia
Contact
Office: FAB 3.39 (to the left as you enter block C)
Office Hours: Tuesdays 11-12, Thursdays 10-11. Please sign up for a slot here.
Phone: 024 76150550, internal extension 50550
Email: C.Shaw.2@warwick.ac.uk
Research
I am a historian of Russia and the Soviet Union, with a particular interest in the formation of Soviet identity and the history of disability and marginality.
My first book, Deaf in the USSR, examines the deaf community in Soviet Russia from 1917 to 1991, focusing on the impact of deafness on Soviet programmes of identity, and examining how Soviet deaf people developed their sense of individual and collective selfhood. In the book, I ask what it meant to be deaf in a culture that was founded on a radically utopian, socialist view of human perfectibility. Engaging with a wide range of sources from both deaf and hearing perspectives—archival sources, films and literature, personal memoirs, and journalism—I consider how fundamental contradictions inherent in the Soviet revolutionary project were negotiated by a vibrant and independent community of deaf people who engaged in complex ways with Soviet ideology. It was named one of Australian Book Review's , and won the in 2019. You can hear more about the book in my conversation with Sean Guillory for
I published a short textbook, , in 2018. I have also worked on contemporary Russian fashion and Soviet public space, topics which I hope to return to in the future.
I am currently working on a book on Soviet attempts to cultivate an ideal human body from the revolution to the collapse of socialism.
Academic Profile
2019 to present: Associate Professor in the History of Modern Russia, 91福利
2017-2019: Assistant Professor in the History of Modern Russia, 91福利
2011-2017: Lecturer in Russian, University of Bristol
2009-2011: Junior Research Fellow, Institute of Historical Research in London
Teaching
(undergraduate first-year core module)
(undergraduate second-year option module)
HI2E1 Historiography I and HI2E2 Historiography II (undergraduate second-year core modules)
HI3J7 Socialist Bodies: Dreams and Realities of the Physical in Soviet Russia (undergraduate final-year Advanced Option module)
Postgraduate Supervision
Current and past doctoral students include:
Catherine Muller, 'Others, Brothers and the Natural World: National and Soviet Belonging in Inter-Soviet Travelogues after 1953'. Funded by the Wheeler History of Travel Writing Scholarship.
Caroline Ridler, 鈥榁iktor Tsoi, Leningrad rock poetry and the cultural politics of glasnost鈥. M4C-funded.
Samir Hamdoud, 'The Royal Albert: Childhood Idiocy and the Institutionalisation of Children鈥檚 Care in Victorian and Edwardian Britain' [Wellcome Trust-funded].
Beckie Rutherford, 鈥楧isabled women organising: rethinking agency within British liberation movements, 1976-1998'. 91福利 University-funded. Successfully completed September 2023.
Diego Repenning, 'Understanding Siberia as a Colony: Bureaucracy and Civil Society in the Era of the Great Reforms'. Successfully completed January 2021.
James Taylor, 'The Cultural Doctors: Music, Health and Identity in Revolutionary Russia'. Successfully completed December 2017.
I would be happy to supervise dissertations and research projects in any related fields.
Selected Publications
Anna Toropova and Claire Shaw, eds., . Bloomsbury Academic, 2023.
'', Zeithistorische Forschungen/Studies in Contemporary History, 2/2022.
'"Just Like It Is at Home!" Soviet Deafness and Socialist Internationalism during the Cold War', in: 碍补迟别艡颈苍补 Kol谩艡ov谩 and Martina Winkler (eds.), Re/imaginations of Disability in State Socialism: Visions, Promises, Frustrations. Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/New York, 2021, p. 27-62.
鈥楽oviet Memoir Literature: Personal Narratives of a Historical Epoch鈥, in Reading Russian Sources: A Student鈥檚 Guide to Text and Visual Sources from Russian History, ed. George Gilbert. Routledge: London, 2020.
Deaf in the USSR: Marginality, Community, and Soviet Identity, 1917-1991. Cornell University Press, 2017.
鈥楧eafness and the Politics of Hearing鈥. in: Tricia Starks, Matthew Romaniello (eds) Russian History through the Senses: From 1700 to the Present. Bloomsbury Academic, London, 2016 pp. 193-218.
鈥樷淲e Have No Need to Lock Ourselves Away鈥: Space, Marginality, and the Negotiation of Deaf Identity in Late Soviet Moscow鈥. Slavic Review, vol 74., pp. 57-78.
鈥'Speaking in the Language of Art': Soviet Deaf Theatre and the Politics of Identity during Khrushchev's Thaw鈥. The Slavonic & East European Review, vol 91., pp. 759-786.
鈥'Fashion Attack': The Style of Pussy Riot鈥. Digital Icons., pp. 115-128.
鈥楢 Fairground for 'Building the New Man': Gorky Park as a Site of Soviet Acculturation鈥. Urban History, vol 38., pp. 324 - 344.


