Oriental dancers, ballerinas, actresses and opera singers the figure of the female performer is ubiquitous in the cinema of pre-Revolutionary Russia. From the first feature film, Romashkov's Stenka Razin (1908), through the sophisticated melodramas of the 1910s, to Viskovsky's The Last Tango (1918), made shortly before the pre-Revolutionary film industry was dismantled by the new Soviet government, the female performer remains central. In this groundbreaking new study, Rachel Morley argues that early Russian film-makers used the character of the female performer to explore key contemporary concerns from changing conceptions of femininity and the emergence of the so-called New Woman, to broader questions concerning gender identity. Morley also reveals that the film-makers repeatedly used this archetype of femininity to experiment with cinematic technology and develop a specific cinematic language."
ISBN: | 9781784531591 |
Publication date: | 18th December 2016 |
Author: | Rachel University College London, UK Morley |
Publisher: | I.B. Tauris an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PLC |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 304 pages |
Series: | KINO - The Russian and Soviet Cinema |
Genres: |
Films, cinema Gender studies: women and girls Film history, theory or criticism History and Archaeology |