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  1. Performative Histories, Foundational Fictions: Gender and Sexuality in Niskavuori Films
    Published: 2003
    Publisher:  Finnish Literature Society / SKS, Helsinki

    "Films are integral to national imagination. Promotional publicity markets “domestic films” not only as entertaining, exciting, or moving, but also as topical and relevant in different ways. Reviewers assess new films with reference to other films... more

     

    "Films are integral to national imagination. Promotional publicity markets “domestic films” not only as entertaining, exciting, or moving, but also as topical and relevant in different ways. Reviewers assess new films with reference to other films and cultural products as well as social and political issues. Through such interpretive framings by contemporaries and later generations, popular cinema is embedded both in national imagination and endless intertextual and intermedial frameworks. Moreover, films themselves become signs to be cited and recycled as illustrations of cultural, social, and political history as well as national mentality. In the age of television, “old films” continue to live as history and memory. In Performative Histories, Foundational Fictions, Anu Koivunen analyzes the historicity as well as the intertextuality and intermediality of film reception by focusing on a cycle of Finnish family melodrama and its key role in thinking about gender, sexuality, nation, and history. Close-reading posters, advertisements, publicity-stills, trailers, review journalism, and critical commentary, she demonstrates how The Women of Niskavuori (1938 and

    1958), Loviisa (1946), Heta Niskavuori (1952), Aarne Niskavuori (1954), Niskavuori Fights (1957), and Niskavuori (1984) have operated as sites for imagining “our agrarian past”, our Heimat and heritage as well as “the strong Finnish woman” or “the weak man in crisis”. Based on extensive empirical research, Koivunen argues that the Niskavuori films have mobilized readings in terms of history and memory, feminist nationalism and men’s movement, left-wing allegories and right-wing morality as well as realism and melodrama. Through processes of citation, repetition, and re-cycling the films have acquired not only a heterogeneous and contradictory interpretive legacy, but also an affective force."

     

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    Source: OAPEN
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9789522227713; 9789522227706
    Other identifier:
    Subjects: Finland; Film: styles & genres; Popular culture; Gender studies: women; Gender studies: men
    Other subjects: melodrama; hella wuolijoki; national cinema; gender; finnish cinema; cultural memory; Finland; Loviisa; Peasant
    Scope: 1 electronic resource (425 p.)
  2. A "Labyrinth of Linkages" in Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina"
    Published: 2010
    Publisher:  Academic Studies Press, Boston, MA

    The renowned Russian writer Leo Tolstoy created a realistic masterpiece in Anna Karenina (1878). In the same work, moreover, he utilized allegory and symbol to an extent and at a level of sophistication unknown in his other works. In Browning’s... more

     

    The renowned Russian writer Leo Tolstoy created a realistic masterpiece in Anna Karenina (1878). In the same work, moreover, he utilized allegory and symbol to an extent and at a level of sophistication unknown in his other works. In Browning’s study, the author identifies and analyzes previously unnoticed or only briefly mentioned “linkages and keystones” found in two highly developed clusters of symbols, arising from Anna’s momentous train ride and peasant nightmares, and of allegories, rooted in Vronsky’s disastrous steeplechase. Within this labyrinth of symbol and allegory lies embedded much of the novel’s most significant meaning. This study will be of particular interest to students and scholars of Russian literature, Tolstoy, symbol, allegory, structuralism, and moral criticism.

     

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    Source: OAPEN
    Contributor: Browning, Gary L. (Publisher)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781936235476; 9781618116796
    Other identifier:
    Subjects: Anthologies (non-poetry)
    Other subjects: Arts; Literary Criticism; Allegory; Anna Karenina; Balashov (town); Frou-Frou (1955 film); Gladiator (2000 film); Leo Tolstoy; Moscow; Peasant; Saint Petersburg; Serfdom in Russia