Ultra.Kultura

Ultra.Kultura
Founded2003
FounderIlya Kormiltsev
Country of originRussia
Official websiteOfficial website

Ultra.Kultura (Russian: Ультра.Культура) was a Russian counterculture book publisher.

History

In 2003, Ilya Kormiltsev founded publishing house Ultra.Kultura and managed it as the editor-in-chief since 2003 until his death in 2007. Ultra.Kultura became notorious in 2004, when Russian authorities accused it with propaganda of drug use and terrorism.[1][2] In 2006, all copies of the combined Ultra.Kultura edition of Adam Parfrey's Apocalypse Culture and Apocalypse Culture II were sought by authorities, and most were seized and submitted to flames, owing to the book's inclusion of an essay by David Woodard that was alleged to promote recreational ketamine use.[3]

Series

  • overdrive - "radical" fiction
  • russkiy drive - books of young Russian authors
  • non-fiction - books dealing with acute social issues (terrorism, drugs)
  • cybertime - books about information technology
  • ЖZЛ - books about leading figures of the counterculture
  • Klassenkampf - opinion journalism
  • ultra.fiction - fiction books

Authors

Ultra.Kultura was known for publishing "controversial" authors and books related to far-left and far-right extremism.[citation needed] Ultra.Kultura published essays of National Bolshevik Party leader Eduard Limonov when he was imprisoned.[4][5]

Other notable authors include :

See also

References

  1. ^ Из продажи изъяли 7 книг издательства "Ультра. Культура" Archived 2012-02-18 at the Wayback Machine. grani.ru
  2. ^ Террор отложили до лучших времен. gazeta.ru
  3. ^ Tveritina, A., "Nazi books create debate on book banning", Russia Beyond the Headlines, Sept. 30, 2013.
  4. ^ Эдуард Лимонов - В плену у мертвецов. ultraculture.ru
  5. ^ Эдуард Лимонов - Другая Россия. ultraculture.ru

External links

  • Ultra.Kultura - official website
  • Ultra.Kultura 2.0 - official website