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Russian television today : primetime drama and comedy / David MacFadyen.

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Van Pelt Library PN1992.3.R8 M33 2008
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
MacFadyen, David, 1964-
Series:
Routledge contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Television broadcasting--Russia (Federation)--History.
Television broadcasting.
Television programs--Russia (Federation)--History.
Television programs.
History.
Russia (Federation).
Physical Description:
244 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
London ; New York : Routledge, 2008.
Summary:
The most important stories in Russia have traditionally been those of literature; today that function is fulfilled by TV drama. This book examines the role of dramatized narratives in Russian television, demonstrating how they grapple with key questions of both national identity and recent history. Russian Television Today shows how visual drama succeeds in offering some answers or consolation, laying claim to a window on past generations and showing Russian viewers what might be salvageable from the Soviet experience. Just as Putin uses that experience to hone a fresh understanding of what it means to "be" Russian, so TV's heroes and heroines frequently express themselves with a related, soothing simplicity. Extending and complicating any such harmonies, this book then turns to other important developments: the manufacturing of new "national" on-screen characters and their peculiar relationship to both classic or Soviet literature and Latin-American soaps - all filtered through the enduring emphases of love, fidelity, humor, and irony. Since, however, those filters are often designed to block an unpleasant actuality, this book also pays considerable attention to the pressing problem of domestic crime and its troubled representation on screen - either as Mafia or police adventures. Overall, Russian Television Today provides a detailed account of critical social and aesthetic issues in Russia's primetime visual media, all the way from historical epics to the recent, more profitable emphases of situation comedy and reality shows.
Contents:
Introduction: sweeping statements and broad horizons 1
1 Action heroes: Don Quixote or James Bond? 9
2 Adaptations: TV drama vs. literary prestige 32
3 Soaps: the influence of Latin America 64
4 Costume drama: "life as it really is" 84
5 Melodrama: little people in the big city 103
6 Heroines: airports, planes, and wedding trains 126
7 Comedy: nervous giggling and its serious object 149
8 Law and order: making sense of something 168
9 Criminal series: Soviet traditions come home 187
10 Conclusion: fighting the good fight 209.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [226]-240) and index.
ISBN:
0415424623
9780415424622
020396165X
9780203961650
OCLC:
74941864

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