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Abstract
Could Buster Keaton have starred in Battleship Potemkin?
Did Trotsky plan to write the great Soviet comedy?
And why did Lenin love circus clowns?
The Chaplin Machine reveals the lighter side of the Communist avant-garde and its unlikely passion for American slapstick. Set against the backdrop of the great Russian revolutionary experiment, Owen Hatherley tells the tragic-comedic story of the cinema, art and architecture of the early 20th Century and spotlights the unlikely intersections of East and West.
'Traces an enjoyably idiosyncratic path back and forth between film studios and factories on opposing continents ... offers intellectual excitement as well as rigour'
Pamela Hutchinson, Guardian
'A dark comedy'
Benjamin Noys, Review 31
'Puts the Lenin back in Chaplin and the Chaplin back in the pre-Stalinist USSR. Brilliantly conceived, impeccably researched and concisely written. A definitive work'
Jon Beller, author of The Cinematic Mode of Production (Dartmouth College Press, 2006)
'Teems with exciting histories, possibilities, outrages and revelations. This brilliantly researched and beautifully written lightning bolt of a book approaches art and its history from a completely new point of the compass, and its readers will never again see the last century as they once did! An eye-bulging astonishment!'
Guy Maddin, director of films including The Saddest Music in the World and My Winnipeg.
'Captivating reading; lively, informative and entertaining'
Times Literary Supplement
'A precious and thoroughly researched book, shedding light on a very stimulating chapter of (film) history'
Brooklyn Rail
'Engaging and provocative'
Open Democracy
'A masterly presentation depicting the parody which existed under a communist regime; and showed how Soviet film, art and arhitecture could not avoid the influence of capitalist Americanism ... It is a pioneering work in the field of early film studies and politics'
International Journal of Russian Studies
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
Introduction: Americanism and Fordism - and Chaplinism | 1 | ||
1. Constructing the Chaplin Machine: The Constructivist International Encounters the American Comedians | 35 | ||
2. Red Clowns to the Rescue: Biomechanics in Film, Factory and Circus | 65 | ||
3. No Rococo Palace for Buster Keaton: Architectures of Americanism | 101 | ||
4. The Rhythm of Socialist Construction: Soviet Sound Film and the Creation of an Industrial Economy | 141 | ||
Conclusion: Life is Getting Jollier, Comrades! | 173 | ||
Acknowledgements | 195 | ||
Notes | 197 | ||
Index | 223 |