Prodigal Son: Vasilii Shukshin in Soviet Russian Culture

封面
Northwestern University Press, 2000 - 268 頁

A wildly prolific director, actor, and writer, Vasilii Shukshin (1929-74) reached more Soviets in more media than perhaps any other artist in the post-Stalinist USSR. This first English-language study of Shukshin and his work is thus a portrait of the culture of Soviet Russia after Stalin. John Givens begins with Shukshin's position between cultural realms and social strata: his abandoned peasant heritage in Siberia as the son of a purged kulak on the one hand and his life as a successful artist in Moscow on the other. Givens shows how this clash of cultures and identities was both a burden and the driving force of Shukshin's art-and how it represents a central dichotomy between rural and urban culture in Soviet Russia.This work provides new terms for rereading the culture of Shukshin's time- terms that take up notions of demographic displacement, class difference, and blurred boundaries among genres, audiences, and arts.

搜尋書籍內容

內容

Introduction
1
Chapter One The Shukshin Legend
11
Chapter Two The Actor and the Writer
29
Chapter Three Shukshins Bright Souls
44
Chapter Four Unforgettably Strange People
57
Chapter Five Grotesque Characters
87
Chapter Six The Author and His Critics
112
Chapter Seven Return of the Prodigal Son
136
Chapter Eight Telling His Own Story
153
Conclusion The Shukshin Legend Revisited
191
Notes
201
著作權所有

其他版本 - 查看全部

常見字詞

書目資訊