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  • The Dancer Defects: The Struggle for Cultural Supremacy during the Cold War

    The Dancer Defects by Caute, David;

    The Struggle for Cultural Supremacy during the Cold War

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó OUP Oxford
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2003. szeptember 4.

    • ISBN 9780199249084
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem818 oldal
    • Méret 242x164x45 mm
    • Súly 1282 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • Illusztrációk 16 pp halftone plates
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    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    With the onset of the Cold War, cultural competition flared up between Moscow and the West. It rapidly penetrated theatre, film, music, ballet, painting, and sculpture. Artists such as Miller, Picasso, Eisenstein, Shostakovich, and Stravinsky became involved in this fierce cultural competition through which each of the major Cold War protagonists sought to establish their supremacy.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    The cultural Cold War between the Soviet Union and the West was without precedent. At the outset of this original and wide-ranging historical survey, David Caute establishes the nature of the extraordinary cultural competition set up post-1945 between Moscow, New York, London and Paris, with the most intimate frontier war staged in the city of Berlin. Using sources in four languages, the author of The Fellow-Travellers and The Great Fear explores the cultural Cold War as it rapidly penetrated theatre, film, classical music, popular music, ballet, painting and sculpture, as well as propaganda by exhibition.

    Major figures central to Cold War conflict in the theatre include Brecht, Miller, Sartre, Camus, Havel, Ionesco, Stoppard and Konstantin Simonov, whose inflammatory play, The Russian Question, occupies a chapter of its own based on original archival research. Leading film directors involved included Eisenstein, Romm, Chiarueli, Aleksandrov, Kazan, Tarkovsky and Wajda.

    In the field of music, the Soviet Union in the Zhdanov era vigorously condemned 'modernism', 'formalism', and the avant-garde. A chapter is devoted to the intriguing case of Dmitri Shostakovich, and the disputed authenticity of his 'autobiography' Testimony. Meanwhile in the West the Congress for Cultural Freedom was sponsoring the modernist composers most vehemently condemned by Soviet music critics; Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Hindemith among them. Despite constant attempts at repression, the Soviet Party was unable to check the appeal of jazz on the Voice of America, then rock music, to young Russians.

    Visits to the West by the Bolshoi and Kirov ballet companines, the pride of the USSR, were fraught with threats of cancellation and the danger of defection. Considering the case of Rudolf Nureyev, Caute pours cold water on overheated speculations about KGB plots to injure him and other defecting dancers.

    Turning to painting, where socialist realism prevailed in Russia, and the impressionist heritage was condemned, Caute explores the paradox of Picasso's membership of the French Communist Party. Re-assessing the extent of covert CIA patronage of abstract expressionism (Pollock, De Kooning), Caute finds that the CIA's role has been much exaggerated, likewise the dominance of the New York School.

    Caute challenges some recent, one-dimensional, American accounts of 'Cold War culture', which ignore not only the Soviet performance but virtually any cultural activity outside the USA. The West presented its cultural avant-garde as evidence of liberty, even through monochrome canvases and dodecaphonic music appealed only to a minority audience. Soviet artistic standards and teaching levels were exceptionally high, but the fear of freedom and innovation virtually guaranteed the moral defeat which accelerated the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    This is a profound study of a vast subject which was, we now see, a vital aspect of the Cold War. One now eagerly awaits the second volume.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Introduction: The Culture War
    Part I: Marking the Territory
    Propaganda Wars and Cultural Treaties
    The Gladiatorial Exhibition
    Part II: Stage and Screen Wars: Russia and America
    Broadway Dead, Says Soviet Critic
    The Russian Question - a Russian Play
    Soviet Cinema under Stalin
    Hollywood: The Red Menace
    Witch Hunts: Losey, Kazan, Miller
    Soviet Cinema: The New Wave
    Part III: Stage and Screen Wars: Europe
    Germany Divided: Stage and Screen
    Brecht and the Berliner Ensemble
    Dirty Hands: The Political Theatre of Sartre and Camus
    Squaring the Circle: Ionesco, Beckett, Havel and Stoppard
    Andrzej Wajda: Ashes and Diamonds, Marble and Iron
    Part IV: Music and Ballet Wars
    Classical Music Wars
    Shostakovich's Testimony
    All that Jazz: Iron Curtain Falls
    The Ballet Dancer Defects
    Part V: Art Wars
    Stalinist Art: The Tractor Driver's Supper
    Passports for Paintings: Abstract Impressionism and the CIA
    Picasso and Communist France
    The Other Russia: Pictures by 'Jackasses'
    Conclusion
    Bibliography
    Notes and References

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