The Soviet Nomad

Q2 Arts and Humanities
B. Pearson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The science fiction films of Andrei Tarkovsky, Solaris (1973) and Stalker (1979), are complex responses to the repressive atmosphere of Brezhnev’s rule, after the 7-year delay in seeing Andrei Rublev (1971) released publicly. By using science fiction—a genre that Tarkovsky openly maligned—he was able to fly beneath the radar of State censorship, and develop a nuanced response to the application of Marxist theory of religion in the Soviet experience. Arguing in these films (and in others in his oeuvre) that humans still need the affective dimension of religion (though not the hierarchical, institutional elements of it that Marx had identified with sedation), Tarkovsky hid within his science fiction films a thoroughgoing critique of the Soviet application of Marx. This article uses the concept of “war machine” from the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari to analyze how Tarkovsky did this, and demonstrates that Tarkovsky’s engagement with Marx’s philosophy in these two films shares much in common with Deleuze and Guattari’s way of understanding human meaning making.
苏联游牧民族
安德烈·塔可夫斯基的科幻电影《索拉里斯》(1973)和《潜行者》(1979)是对勃列日涅夫统治下的压抑气氛的复杂回应,因为《安德烈·鲁布列夫》(1971)的公映推迟了7年。通过使用科幻小说——一种被塔可夫斯基公开诋毁的类型——他得以在国家审查的雷达下飞行,并对马克思主义宗教理论在苏联经验中的应用做出了细致入微的回应。在这些电影(以及他作品中的其他电影)中,塔可夫斯基认为人类仍然需要宗教的情感维度(尽管不是马克思认为与镇静有关的等级制和制度因素),他在他的科幻电影中隐藏了对苏联应用马克思的彻底批评。本文从吉尔斯·德勒兹(Gilles Deleuze)和菲姆斯·瓜塔里(f lix Guattari)的哲学中借用“战争机器”的概念来分析塔可夫斯基是如何做到这一点的,并证明塔可夫斯基在这两部电影中对马克思哲学的参与与德勒兹和瓜塔里理解人类意义制造的方式有很多共同之处。
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来源期刊
Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society
Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society Arts and Humanities-History and Philosophy of Science
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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