|
KU ScholarWorks >
Slavic Languages and Literatures >
Slavic Cultural Studies >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1833
|
|
Statistics
|
| Title: | Myth and Morality in Tengiz Abuladze’s “Pokaianie (Repentance)” |
| Authors: | Carlson, Maria |
| Keywords: | Tengiz Abuladze (1924- ) Pokaianie (1984) film Repentance Georgian cinema glasnost Soviet cinema |
| Issue Date: | 2008 |
| Type: | Working Paper |
| Abstract: | Repentance (Pokaianie, 1984), Tengiz Abuladze's phantasmagoric film about the abuse of power, is the landmark film of Gorbachev's perestroika and glasnost'. Its poetic but frank depiction of fascist double-think and Stalinist methods shocked viewers who first saw it in the late 1980s. The film uses the genre of the Elizabethan revenge tragedy and an ambiguously contemporary setting with provocative mythological features to induce catharsis in the viewer. Repentance had the greater aim of inducing catharsis in a nation that needed assistance in moving out from under its own Stalinist shadow. The essay examines this philosophical film by investigating the many complex, multivalent topics that use the analogical, non-linear language of image, metaphor, and symbol and that erase the traditional boundaries that separate past from present, reality from nightmare, absurdity from logic. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1833 |
| Appears in Collections: | Slavic Cultural Studies CREES Faculty Publications
|
Items in KU ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|