Film & Media Studies 329 - Russian & Soviet Film

Fall
2016
01
4.00
Boris Wolfson
TTH 02:30PM-03:50PM
Amherst College
FAMS-329-01-1617F
FAYE 117
bwolfson@amherst.edu
RUSS-241-01,FAMS-329-01

(Offered as RUSS 241 and FAMS 329.)  Lenin proclaimed, famously, that cinema was "the most important art of all" for the new Soviet republic.  This course explores the dramatic rise of Russian film to state-sanctioned prominence and the complex role it came to play in modern Russia's cultural history.  We examine the radical experiments of visionary filmmakers who invented the language of film art (Bauer, Kuleshov, Eisenstein, Vertov, Dovzhenko); the self-conscious masterpieces of auteurs who probed the limits of that language (Tarkovsky, Paradzhanov, Sokurov); and the surprising ways in which films ostensibly designed to enact cultural and social myths of power, history, and national identity in the end reshaped their makers, their audiences, and the myths themselves. No familiarity with of Russian history or culture expected.


Fall semester.  Professor Wolfson.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.