Машины зашумевшего времени
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The main points of this book can be summarized as follows.
Montage as a specific aesthetic method emerged in the very beginning of the twentieth century. Beginning in the 1900s and continuing throughout the 1920s, expressive, «sharp» montage — not only in cinema but also in visual arts and literature — was implemented as a method for the dynamic representation of contemporaneity. Montage produced an aesthetic portrayal of contemporaneity by depicting it as a space of emerging utopia/dystopia, full of conflicts and antagonistic oppositions. Moreover, «montage modernity» acquired the status of a totally new historical period, anthropologically and aesthetically different from all previous epochs. The aesthetics of montage was based on the experience of psychological trauma originating from urbanization, globalization (including the extensive contact of Western artistic circles with the art of China and Japan), WWI, and the subsequent civil wars in Russia and Germany. This book suggests that sharp montage was an element not only of avant-garde art, but also of the diverse movements of modernism and, later, postmodernism.
In the USSR of the 1920s, montage aesthetics acquired the features of a
Several times, Soviet montage was interpreted as a radicalization of Western European and pre-revolutionary Russian (e.g. Andrey Bely) montage aesthetics. However, Soviet montage also strongly influenced left-wing artists in various countries: the image of history as a dynamic-conflicting becoming corresponded with leftist worldviews, and with Marxist and socialist ones first of all.
Meanwhile, different versions of montage aesthetics developed in Western Europe and in the USA. Take, for example, the work of Alfred D"oblin, Erwin Piscator, Bertolt Brecht, and Walter Ruttmann in Germany; Karel Capek in Czechoslovakia; John Dos Passos in the USA; James Joyce in Ireland and France; and Ezra Pound in Great Britain. Not all of these artists were connected with socialist circles: Capek was a liberal, Joyce’s political opinions were also more or less liberal, and Ezra Pound was, as is well-known, close to Italian fascism.
«Epic Polyphonic Political Art» (EPPA) was the most important montage movement formed during the twenties and early thirties. This movement includes the films of Sergei Eisenstein and Dziga Vertov, the plays of Bertolt Brecht and Vsevolod Vishnevskii, the theater performances directed by Erwin Piscator and Vsevolod Meyerhold, and, as strange as it may seem, the Jefferson Cantos by Ezra Pound. The most common EPPA plot featured a major historical turning point and an approaching anthropological transformation. EPPA existed in the USSR, Central Europe, and the USA. Hence, this movement functioned as an interactive space between Soviet culture and Western left (and even non-left) artistic movements of the 1930s.
Some authors living in the USSR transformed montage’s meaning in their texts in order to critically revisit the Bolshevik image of history, and to resist state-controlled propaganda. Such texts — including prose works by Lev Luntz, Mikhail Bulgakov, and Daniil Kharms — were kept from the Soviet public, or were «written for the drawer,» without the expectation of receiving the censor’s approval. Such texts and works of art are designated non-censored art, to utilize a term that has been accepted in Russian underground criticism since the 1970s.
The image of a «creative violent modernity» was significantly transformed during the 1930s in Western Europe, North America, Nazi Germany, and the USSR; however the shifts in this image had different sources and varied in their results. In Western Europe and North America, the collective feeling of an impending social crisis, generated by the rupture of the social order after WWI, became weaker or more habitual. The growth of mass culture, as well as the collective rush towards emotional escapism in the face of WWII’s approach, prompted the expansion of comforting melodramatic plots in cinema and literature. These plots did not require sharp montage; on the contrary, such stories inclined writers and directors to use even-tempered, non-conflicting styles of narrative and/or portrayal.
In Nazi Germany, montage devices, which propagandist media associated with
At the same time, during the 1930s Soviet authorities initiated a radical cultural and political turn toward «national-Bolshevism» (to use David Brandenberger’s understanding of this term). This shift was marked by the emergence of a new image of Soviet contemporaneity as the «space of triumph» (rephrasing Mikhail Ryklin’s term «the spaces of jubilation»), and not as the launching pad for utopia. In its self-representation, the USSR turned away from a project aimed at a utopian future for all mankind, and instead toward the image of a flourishing but isolated empire that had already accomplished everything desired. Under these new circumstances, melodramatic plots (demonstrating Soviet interpretation of Hollywood style), encouraged the «indigenous» weakening of montage aesthetics. These plots sought to emotionally mobilize the audience, and to represent neo-imperial Bolshevik ideology as natural, kind, and inevitable. However, the futuristic connotations of montage techniques were revived in the aesthetics of Soviet pavilions for international exhibitions; former avant-garde artists were among the designers of these pavilions, including Nikolai Suetin, who, as a student, worked closely with Kazimir Malevich.
The only artists who maintained a taste for montage in Western European and American literatures of the late 1930s and 1940s were those who interpreted the historical period before and during WWII as transitional or catastrophic, rather than progressive: D"oblin, Brecht, Dos Passos, Capek.
In Russian culture, new meanings of montage were further developed in non-censored literature. Here, prose works by Arkadii Belinkov and unpublished verses by Vladimir Lugovskoy and Daniil Andreev are discussed. The revival of montage in Russia was closely associated with unofficial discussions on the «neo-baroque» — a style that was conceived by Ilya Ehrenburg and Arkadii Belinkov as a restoration of radical modernism in the context of WWII, confronting 1930s socialist realism.
In evaluating the evolution of twentieth century Western art, scholars such as Vladimir Paperny and Boris Groys argue that avant-garde and socialist realism/totalitarian art were the unified aesthetic systems. If this is true, only one question remains: was the avant-garde a logical predecessor of socialist realism, or did socialist realism emerge as the total repressive negation of the avant-garde? As it is argued in this book, the relationship between the avant-garde and socialist realism is more complicated and nonlinear than previously understood. In the late 1930s and 1940s, the techniques of montage were transferred into a new context, and there they survived. Moreover, careful examination of the aesthetic movements of the 1910s-1940s gives reason to reject the essentialist opposition of the avant-garde and socialist realism.
During late 1930s and 1940s, post-utopian montage gradually came into being in Western cultures and in Russian non-censored art. Now, montage did not point to a desirable future, nor did it depict contemporaneity as a battlefield of conflicting forces. Rather, the main task of post-utopian montage was to represent history as a series of ruptures, fragmenting and reordering a private and/or social experience. Even though Brecht and Eisenstein maintained hope for a progressive future, their works nevertheless acquired the features of post-utopian montage.