Russian Documentary Filmmaker at Seton Hall - Seton Hall University
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
A Russian documentary filmmaker Alexander Markov will discuss his recent work in a presentation "Soviet Filmmakers in Africa, 1955-1991: Documentary Cinema in the Service of the State."
During the heyday of African studies in the Soviet Union in the 1960s, a number of Soviet filmmakers were dispatched to the continent to produce newsreels and documentary films whose mission was to record the "friendships" between the Soviet socialist specialists at the helm of scientific progress and the African socialist hopefuls who had just broken free from the yoke of colonialism. Those cinematic journeys generated a plethora of documentary footage, which several decades later remains a baffling, fascinating, and revealing historical document of this vanished era of great hope and ideological confusion.
Presently Markov holds an appointment as a Visiting Fulbright scholar at the Department of Russian and Slavic Studies, New York University.
This event is co-sponsored by the Russian and East European Studies Program, the Department of History and the Slavic Club. All program events are free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.