Kozintsev's Shakespeare Films: Russian Political Protest in Hamlet and King Lear

Kozintsev's Shakespeare Films: Russian Political Protest in Hamlet and King Lear book cover

Kozintsev's Shakespeare Films: Russian Political Protest in Hamlet and King Lear

Author(s): Tiffany Ann Conroy Moore (Author)

  • Publisher: McFarland & Co
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec. 2012
  • Edition: Illustrated
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 202 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0786471352
  • ISBN-13: 9780786471355

Book Description

This book is a study of Grigory Kozintsev’s two cinematic Shakespeare adaptations, Hamlet (Gamlet, 1964), and King Lear (Korol Lir, 1970). The films are considered in relation to the historical, artistic and cultural contexts in which they appear, and in relation to the contributions of Dmitri Shostakovich, who wrote the films’ scores; and Boris Pasternak, whose translations Kozintsev used. The films are analyzed respective to their place in the translation and performance history of Hamlet and King Lear from their first appearances in Tsarist Russian arts and letters. In particular, this study is concerned with the ways in which these plays have been used as a means to critique the government and the country’s problems in an age in which official censorship was commonplace. Kozintsev’s films (as well as his theatrical productions of Hamlet and Lear) continue along this trajectory of protest by providing a vehicle for him and his collaborators to address the oppression, violence and corruption of Soviet society. It was just this sort of covert political protest that finally effected the dissolution and fall of the USSR.

Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

This book is a study of Grigory Kozintsev’s two cinematic Shakespeare adaptations, Hamlet (Gamlet, 1964), and King Lear (Korol Lir, 1970). The films are considered in relation to the historical, artistic and cultural contexts in which they appear, and in relation to the contributions of Dmitri Shostakovich, who wrote the films’ scores; and Boris Pasternak, whose translations Kozintsev used. The films are analyzed respective to their place in the translation and performance history of Hamlet and King Lear from their first appearances in Tsarist Russian arts and letters. In particular, this study is concerned with the ways in which these plays have been used as a means to critique the government and the country’s problems in an age in which official censorship was commonplace. Kozintsev’s films (as well as his theatrical productions of Hamlet and Lear) continue along this trajectory of protest by providing a vehicle for him and his collaborators to address the oppression, violence and corruption of Soviet society. It was just this sort of covert political protest that finally effected the dissolution and fall of the USSR.

About the Author

The late Tiffany Ann Conroy Moore was a college English professor in the United Arab Emirates. She held a doctorate from Northeastern University and a master’s degree from Boston College, both in English with a focus on Shakespeare and Cinema Studies, her undergraduate degree was in Literary Studies from Middlebury College.

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