The Balkans as “Pretty Kitsch”: Stereotypes, the Traveler’s View and Parody in Migrant Cinema
The result's identifiers
Result code in IS VaVaI
<a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F46747885%3A24510%2F17%3A00005358" target="_blank" >RIV/46747885:24510/17:00005358 - isvavai.cz</a>
Result on the web
<a href="http://zeitschrift-fuer-balkanologie.de/index.php/zfb/article/view/475" target="_blank" >http://zeitschrift-fuer-balkanologie.de/index.php/zfb/article/view/475</a>
DOI - Digital Object Identifier
—
Alternative languages
Result language
angličtina
Original language name
The Balkans as “Pretty Kitsch”: Stereotypes, the Traveler’s View and Parody in Migrant Cinema
Original language description
This essay analyzes Balkanist stereotypical images in recent southeast European films, mostly from the post-socialist era, when encounters between people of the former eastern and western sides of the Iron Curtain intensified and became the topic of numerous productions. The characters either travel in their country between a westernized city and what was traditionally Balkanic countryside, or they oscillate between their homeland and western Europe as immigrants or exiles. The films tend to portray strong, bohemian, jovial, patriarchal male and young, temperamental female Balkanites, as well as wise old women who live in the countryside and still use centuries-old, almost supernatural, folk wisdom that entails magical realist depictions. Many critics find such stereotypical characterizations problematic to a greater or lesser degree. This essay, however, relies on imagology and stresses that the way nations construct their own ethnic identity is inevitably intertwined with externally constructed and maintained discourses, and detects three distinct stereotypical behaviors. First, several protagonists remain faithful to their ethnic or Balkan heritage: although they experience the lure of the urbanized West, they eventually return to their homeland and synthesize East and West. Second, certain less heroic or even villainous characters become morally corrupted by contemporary western society. Third, many Balkan films feature clumsy but loveable characters who try to imitate the West, but they fail to create their mimicry convincingly. Such carnivalesque techniques of parody equally target western and eastern stereotypes, holding a broken mirror to both traditions, and thus gaining popularity among both audiences. Thus, the estranged but somewhat familiar views of the Balkans emphasize and criticize the marginalized position of the region by bringing to the foreground attempts to accept western European values, while at the same time portraying alienation from western Europe.
Czech name
—
Czech description
—
Classification
Type
J<sub>SC</sub> - Article in a specialist periodical, which is included in the SCOPUS database
CEP classification
—
OECD FORD branch
60405 - Studies on Film, Radio and Television
Result continuities
Project
—
Continuities
S - Specificky vyzkum na vysokych skolach
Others
Publication year
2017
Confidentiality
S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů
Data specific for result type
Name of the periodical
Zeitschrift für Balkanologie
ISSN
0044-2356
e-ISSN
—
Volume of the periodical
53
Issue of the periodical within the volume
2
Country of publishing house
DE - GERMANY
Number of pages
20
Pages from-to
256-275
UT code for WoS article
—
EID of the result in the Scopus database
2-s2.0-85042189003