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Arts and Humanities

Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature

Journal

2000

Feminine

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Melodramatic Masculinity, National Identity, And The Stalinist Past In Postsoviet Cinema , Susan Larsen Jan 2000

Melodramatic Masculinity, National Identity, And The Stalinist Past In Postsoviet Cinema , Susan Larsen

Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature

The genre of melodrama, sweepingly scorned by Soviet film critics, proved a convenient screen vehicle for a distinctively Postsoviet imagination responding to the historical and social conundrums of the 1990s. Retrospection dominated the decade's most distinctive films, which enlisted melodramatic conventions to identify heroic Russian masculinity as the principal victim of Stalinist evil. In an intersection of national, historical, and sexual identities, directors of different backgrounds and generations collapsed feminine and Stalinist "nature" into one. Illustrative of this trend were three of the period's best known and most provocative films: Petr Todorovskii's Encore, Again, Encore (1992), Ivan Dykhovichnyi's Moscow Parade …