Listen "Russia’s Prison Knocking Language"
Episode Synopsis
How did generations of Russian revolutionaries communicate in prison? Especially under strict surveillance, censorship and enforced silence? One way was through the sound of tapping. Prisoners used purposeful “tuks, tuks, tuks” in a coded pattern to communicate through their cells' thick granite walls. This syntax of taps developed in the 1820s and continued well into the 20th century. How did this tapping language develop and spread? How did it help concretize a collective revolutionary identity? The Eurasian Knot talked to Nicholas Bujalski to learn more about his prize winning article “Tuk, tuk, tuk!” A History of Russia’s Prison Knocking Language” published in the July 2022 issue of the Russian Review.Guest:Nicholas Bujalski is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Oberlin College. His writing has appeared in The Russian Review, Modern Intellectual History, and the Marx & Philosophy Review of Books, and his current book project is a cultural, intellectual, and spatial history of Russia’s revolutionary movement through the prison cells of the Peter and Paul Fortress. His article, “Tuk, tuk, tuk!” A History of Russia’s Prison Knocking Language” won best article in Russian Review in 2023.Send us your sounds! PatreonKnotty News Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
More episodes of the podcast The Eurasian Knot
The Stiliagi
15/12/2025
Fraternization and Survival During WWII
24/11/2025
The Art of War
17/11/2025
How Peat Electrified the USSR
27/10/2025
Murder Mystery in Moscow
20/10/2025
How Konigsberg Became Kaliningrad
13/10/2025
The Judeo-Bolshevik Myth
06/10/2025
Romani, Waste, and Race in Bulgaria
29/09/2025
Rebel Russia
22/09/2025
Russians in San Francisco
15/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.