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The Russian Kurosawa offers a new historical perspective on the
work of the renowned Japanese film director Akira Kurosawa. It
uncovers Kurosawa's debt to the intellectual tradition of
Japanese-Russian democratic dissent, reflected in the affinity for
Kurosawa's worldview expressed by such Russian directors as Grigory
Kozintsev and Andrei Tarkovsky. Through a detailed discussion of
the Russian subtext of Kurosawa's cinema, most clearly manifested
in the director's films based on Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Gorky, and
Arseniev, the book shows that Kurosawa used Russian intertexts to
deal with the most politically sensitive topics of postwar Japan.
Locating the director in the cultural tradition of
Russian-inflected Japanese anarchism, the book challenges prevalent
views of Akira Kurosawa as an apolitical art house director or a
conformist studio filmmaker of muddled ideological alliances by
offering a philosophically consistent picture of the director's
participation in post-war debates on cultural and political
reconstruction.
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