Cinema of Sincerity
Soviet Films and Culture During the Thaw (livre en anglais)

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Description de l'ouvrage :
Following Stalin’s death in 1953 and Khrushchev’s acknowledgment of Stalin’s crimes in 1956, “sincerity” emerged as a cultural imperative in the Soviet Union. The cinema of this period turned inward, insisting on ordinary characters and creating a sense of spontaneity through particular staging methods and cinematic techniques, such as interior monologue and the close-up. These changes shifted the understanding of what “realism” meant and allowed Soviet cinema to reestablish with its audiences the trust that had been corrupted by serving Stalin’s cult of personality.
Using both theory and close readings of specific films produced in the Soviet Union during the Thaw, a period known for its relative political and cultural liberalization, Cinema of Sincerity treats sincerity as both a concept and an aesthetic strategy. Viktoria Paranyuk argues that Soviet cinema’s use of sincerity was a reworking of a trend in global cinema that sought to bridge the gap between reality and the filmed image. This period saw increased accessibility to world cinematic traditions, new voices in criticism, and, above all, the multigenerational effort in filmmaking that developed and thrived in centers outside Moscow. Paranyuk demonstrates how these changes allowed Soviet cinema to renew its visual language and use film as a space for collective self-examination.
À propos de l'auteur :
Viktoria Paranyuk is a lecturer in the Department of Film and Screen Studies at Pace University. Her work has been published in Slavic Review, Film History, [in]Transition: Journal of Videographic Film & Moving Image Studies, and elsewhere.
Revue de Presse :
"Through expansive research and meticulous analysis, Paranyuk constructs a new narrative of Soviet film, one that both productively engages international new wave cinemas of the 1960s and defines the distinctive parameters of postwar Soviet film aesthetics. Cinema of Sincerity is a remarkably sophisticated and original contribution to film history." -- Lida Oukaderova, author of The Cinema of the Soviet Thaw
"Gives us a new angle on the period and provides a rich source of documentation of the cultural exchanges between the USSR and postwar European cinemas (Italian neorealism and Left Bank cinemas), which makes it invaluable. Expands our notion of Soviet cinema beyond Moscow and the Mosfilm studio, thereby helping decolonize the field of Slavic film studies and broadening the canon." -- Lilya Kaganovsky, author of The Voice of Technology: Soviet Cinema’s Transition to Sound, 1928–1935
Voir le site internet de l'éditeur University of Wisconsin Press
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