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022_000055/0000

War Matters. Constructing Images of the Other (1930s to 1950s)

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Antropológia, néprajz / Anthropology, ethnology (12857), Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950), Társadalomszerkezet, egyenlőtlenségek, társadalmi mobilitás, etnikumközi kapcsolatok / Social structure, inequalities, social mobility, interethnic relations (12525), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046)
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022_000055/0300
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American Femininity in Soviet Films during the Early Cold War (1946—1955) an African American boy Ben Robinson, sending him to death even though his mother Mary had worked as a housemaid in the Steals" house for twenty years.? Another personification of cruelty—Mrs. Dodge, a journalist—from They Have a Motherland (Vladimir Legoshin, Aleksandr Faintsimmer, 1950) was characterised by a film critic as a “Nazi storm trooper under the guise of a representative of the free press” (Kokoreva 1950: 31). The question of the primary opponent’s closeness to Nazism occupied a very important place in the propaganda of both of the main Cold War adversaries. In 1946 Stalin, reacting to Winston Churchill’s Fulton speech, was already qualifying Nazi race theory as an ideological basis for the idea of Anglo-Saxon race supremacy (Stalin 1946).* The Russian Question illustrated this point with Gould’s words: “The Germans made only one mistake: it’s not them but us, the Anglo-Saxons, who are the highest race”.’ Film criticism also stressed the proximity of American imperialism to Nazism (Solovev 1951: 22). One more remarkable trait of American women was the hollowness of their life goals; as Soviet propaganda emphasised, since bourgeois society did not create opportunities for women’s self-realisation and equality of the sexes, American women were narrow-minded (Rikhter 1997: 40). Moreover the capitalist system aimed to narrow women's life goals. Silver Dust ridiculed bourgeois women’s piety as well as their racist and anti-communist prejudices. A mercenary spirit was another feature prescribed to American women. One of the most remarkable American female characters of Soviet Cold War cinema was Janet Sherwood, whose role was performed by Soviet movie star Lyubov Orlova. The actress described her heroine as “well-groomed, beautiful, stylish, and at the same time spiritually empty, without lofty aims, without sincere feelings and affections, cold, selfish, ambitious, who believes only in bank accounts and worships only the dollar” (quoted in Aleksandrov 1976: 297). Indeed the cult of money was believed to be the most important trait of Americans, both men and women. That is why commercial gain allegedly was the main reason for marriage for Americans. For instance, Gould openly told Jessie that he had married a “really unattractive but very rich woman” only for the money. Inasmuch as marriage has class nature, individual preferences in love cannot be achieved due to social barriers. The tragedy of love in a bourgeois society was a recurring theme of Soviet propaganda reflected in many movies of this period. In American society as seen by Soviet cinematographers, the role of a love substitute was sex. Sexual profligacy served as an important marker to distinguish > In the Jakobson’s play The Jackals, which underlies the film scenario, Doris expresses a wish to attend the execution in person (Jakobson 1952: 89). ‘The propagandists actively exploited the legacy of evoking Nazism. One could find analogous ways of representing the Enemy on the opposite side of the Iron Curtain (Clark 2000: 37). 5 On the role of picturing the ties between US and the Nazis in creating cinematic representations of American Enemy see Turovskaya 1993: 100. 299

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