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- Title
Belated Zionism: The Cinematographic Exiles of Mikhail Kalik.
- Authors
Katsnelson, Anna Wexler
- Abstract
This article reexamines the complexities and difficulties associated with the formation of an Israeli identity and an Israeli life among the Soviet Jews who made aliyah in Israel of the 1970s through the prism of immigrant cinematography. I focus on the career of Mikhail Kalik, a celebrated Soviet filmmaker who immigrated to Israel in 1971, as representative of misdirected expectations. Reframing the historical moment of Kalik's repatriation, I suggest that his motivation, a uniquely 1970s Soviet Jewish identity construct that hinged on discursive belatedness—was no longer in sync with Israeli society and was thus his undoing. A close reading of Kalik's two post-immigration films, Shloshah ve-ahat (The Three and the One) and I vozzvraschiasetsia veter (And the Wind Returneth), reveals their paradoxical aesthetic dependence on socialist-realism as a means of delivering an ideologically inflected message, as well as their ultimately damaging misreading of the new host society.
- Subjects
ISRAEL; ZIONISM; CINEMATOGRAPHY; KALIK, Mikhail; SOVIET Jews; JEWISH identity; FILMMAKERS; IDEOLOGY; MOTION pictures; JEWISH nationalism
- Publication
Jewish Social Studies, 2008, Vol 14, Issue 3, p126
- ISSN
0021-6704
- Publication type
Article