Russian television today : primetime drama and comedy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Russian television today : primetime drama and comedy
(Routledge contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe series, 9)
Routledge, 2011, c2008
- : pbk
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Note
Originally published: 2008
"First issued in paperback 2011"--T.p. verso
Filmography: p. [215]-225
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Examining the role of dramatized narratives in Russian television, this book stresses the ways in which the Russian government under Putin use primetime television to express a new understanding of what it means to be Russian, answering key questions of national identity for modern Russians in dealing with their recent history: 'What really happened to us?' and, accordingly, 'Why?'
The book covers important issues in Russian television today, including:
the reworking of new 'national' on-screen heroes
its relationship with classic literature
the revisionist portrayal of a romantic portrait of life in the Soviet era
the role of thematic elements such as love, fidelity, humour and irony
the particularly pressing problem of crime and its representation on screen as Mafia or police adventure, and its political usage by the Putin administration.
This book provides a detailed account of the critical issues in contemporary Russian television, relating them to broader social and political developments in Russian society.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Sweeping Statements and Broad Horizons 1. Action Heroes: Don Quixote or James Bond? 2. Adaptations: TV Drama vs. Literary Prestige 3. Soaps: The Influence of Latin America 4. Costume Drama: "Life as It Really Is" 5. Melodrama: Little People in the Big City 6. Heroines: Airports, Planes and Wedding Trains 7. Comedy: Nervous Giggling and its Serious Object 8. Law and Order: Making Sense of Something 9. Criminal Series: Soviet Traditions Come Home. Conclusion: Fighting the Good Fight. Filmography
by "Nielsen BookData"