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Screening Soviet Nationalities: Kulturfilms from the Far North to Central Asia

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Screening Soviet Nationalities: Kulturfilms from the Far North to Central Asia

Contributors:

By (Author) Oksana Sarkisova

ISBN:

9781350242456

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic

Publication Date:

25th March 2021

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Colonialism and imperialism
Films, cinema
Cultural studies
Media studies

Dewey:

791.430947

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

320

Dimensions:

Width 138mm, Height 216mm

Weight:

372g

Description

Filmmakers in the early decades of the Soviet Union sought to create a cinematic map of the new state by portraying its land and peoples on screen. Such films created blueprints of the Soviet domain's scenic, cultural and ethnographic perimeters and brought together - in many ways disparate - nations under one umbrella. Categorised as kulturfilms, they served as experimental grounds for developing the cinematic formulae of a multiethnic, multinational Soviet identity. Screening Soviet Nationalities examines the non-fictional representations of Soviet borderlands from the Far North to the Northern Caucasus and Central Asia between 1925-1940. Beginning with Dziga Vertov and his vision of the Soviet space as a unified, multinational mosaic, Oksana Sarkisova rediscovers films by Vladimir Erofeev, Vladimir Shneiderov, Alexander Litvinov, Mikhail Slutskii, Amo Bek-Nazarov, Mikhail Kalatozov, Roman Karmen and other filmmakers who helped construct an image of Soviet ethnic diversity and left behind a lasting visual legacy.The book contributes to our understanding of changing ethnographic conventions of representation, looks at studies of diversity despite the homogenising ambitions of the Soviet project, and reexamines methods of blending reality and fiction as part of both ideological and educational agendas. Using a wealth of unexplored archival evidence from the Russian State Documentary Film and Photo Archive (RGAKFD) as well as the Gosfilmofond state film archive, Sarkisova examines constructions of exoticism, backwardness and Soviet-driven modernity through these remarkable and underexplored historical travelogues.

Author Bio

Oksana Sarkisova is Research Fellow at the Blinken Open Society Archives at Central European University (CEU), Co-Founder of Visual Studies Platform at CEU, and Director of Verzio International Human Rights Documentary Film Festival, Hungary.

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