Pride and Panic: Russian Imagination of the West in Post-Soviet Film
Since the fall of Communism, Russians have struggled to reconcile their social traditions with a flood of Western cultural imports. Contemporary Russian cinema has latched on to the resulting confusion and ambivalence, mining societal upheaval for revolutionary cinematic topics. Yana Hashamova explores this largely uncharted territory in Pride and Panic.
A groundbreaking study, Pride and Panic probes cinematic representations of the unsettled Russian national consciousness, a complex cocktail of fear, anger, and anxious uncertainty.
Sara had been torn from Earth by a nameless black force and taken to Lothar where she was forced to care for a strange man, who she discovered was the Regent. She escaped in panic, and become a fugitive in a world of multiple evils...
Журнал для изучающих английский язык CONTENTS Examination - ЕГЭ: Hot Tips Nadezhda's corner - Welcome, Change! Troughout America - A Wonderful Trip to New York City Anglosphere - How Canadians Got Their Name Good Manners - Dining Etiquette - 2 Modern Society - Being Mixed Race Words - English is a Crasy Language Cover - Eva Mendes Music -Panic! At the Disco; Who’s Who in the Music Industry Sports - «Конская голова» Britain - Famous Places History of Things - Ice Cream