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From Victimhood to Empowerment
Representing Women in 1920s Soviet Georgian Cinema
From Victimhood to Empowerment
Representing Women in 1920s Soviet Georgian Cinema
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Description
From Victimhood to Empowerment: Representing Women in 1920s Soviet Georgian Cinema brings the cinematographic works of Georgia's State Film Industry from the margins of the Soviet film studies to the center. The book focuses on women's representations and explores how the gender roles were modified throughout the decade according to the new social and political ideals employing the discourse analysis, postcolonial perspectives, and psychoanalytical feminist film theories.
Bringing together Soviet Georgia's most important films of the period, the book inspects the female body's symbolic function in the aspects of class dichotomy, orientalised 'other', revolutionary setting and as the 'heroine' and the 'villain' of the new social order- the New Soviet Woman and the Nepwoman (a person who engaged in private enterprise during the New Economic Policy of the 1920s) respectively.
In the light of Bolsheviks' preoccupation and endeavour to improve 'woman question', the book surveys to what extent women's screen images were emancipated during the decade and what the functional meaning of this emancipation was in the given context, how the new ideals of New Soviet woman were inscribed in the period's films, and how these ideals were combined with Georgian nationality.
Table of Contents
Notes on Translation and Transliteration
List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Class and Symbolic Meaning of Female Bodies
2. At the Intersection of Class and Ethnicity
3. Representing the 'East': Oriental Victim/Murderess
4. Transformation of the 'East'
5. Meet the New Soviet Woman: Incompatibility of Femininity and Agency
6. Monstrous Femininity of the NEP women
7. Reimagining Revolution as an Oedipal Drama: Transformation of the Mother Figure in the 1920s Revolutionary Films
Conclusion
Selected Filmography
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | 04 Sep 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781501383151 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 41 bw illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Attentive to cinematic language and socio-cultural context, this ground-breaking book examines representations of women in 1920s Soviet Georgian cinema, tracing their evolution from victimized object to empowered subject. Revealing much of importance about women's history in Georgia, its national focus also deepens our understanding of the early Soviet cinema industry.
Rachel Morley, Associate Professor, University College London, UK
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