Queering socialist realism: Serhii Paradzhanov’s early Ukrainian films and his transition to poetic cinema | Kino 2025


Queering socialist realism: Serhii Paradzhanov’s early Ukrainian films and his transition to poetic cinema | Kino 2025

Date and time:

Tuesday 25 March, 2025
18:30 - 20:00

Location:

ONLINE


Sergei Paradzhanov, director of the internationally acclaimed film ‘Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors’ (1965), which established the Ukrainian school of poetic cinema, was one of the most innovative and persecuted figures in post-war cinema. On December 17, 1973, Paradzhanov was arrested in Kyiv and subsequently sentenced to five years in a strict labor camp on charges of homosexuality and dissemination of pornography. Paradzhanov’s arrest coincided with a broader crackdown on Ukrainian dissident artists and intellectuals. This lecture will examine the political context surrounding Paradzhanov’s arrest and explore the potential connections between his sexual, political, and artistic dissidence, with a particular focus on his Ukrainian period.

During his time in Kyiv, Paradzhanov completed five full-length feature films, with only the last, ‘Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors’, marking his creative breakthrough. Prior to this, his early works were generally considered unsuccessful, a sentiment shared by Paradzhanov himself. While these films were intended to conform to standard socialist realist genres such as collective farm musicals, war dramas, and anti-religious satires, they failed to convey the expected ideological messages convincingly. However, rather than mere failures, these early works can be viewed as positioned at an ‘oblique angle to what coheres,’ to quote Sara Ahmed.They invite closer examination, particularly through a queer lens, to uncover how Paradzhanov inadvertently subverted the canons of socialist realism and planted the seeds of his future poetic style. This lecture will explore these early films—Paradzhanov before he became ‘Paradzhanov’—to trace the development of his unique cinematic vision.

See all eight Kino seminars here.

Queering socialist realism: Serhii Paradzhanov’s early Ukrainian films and his transition to poetic cinema | Kino 2025

£35 general

£25 student

Friends and Benefactors of the Institute are also eligible for a discount.

Lecturer

Olha Briukhovstska

Olha Briukhovetska, PhD, specialises in film theory and visual culture, with a current research focus on the cinema of Sergei Paradzhanov, particularly his Ukrainian period. Her work is published in both Ukrainian and English, appearing in notable publications such as Apparatus: Film, Media and Digital Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe, KinoKultura, Art-It, Red Thread, Frieze, and L’Internationale. Briukhovetska has been a Professor of Cultural Studies at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in Ukraine since 2007. At present, she is serving as a guest researcher at the FernUniversität in Hagen, Germany.