‘Neo-Gothic Clairvoyance and Palingenetic Myth in Late Soviet Czechoslovakia and Post-Soviet Israel: Pavel Kohout’s The Premonitions of St Clara (1980) and Its Film Adaptations’
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28466Dato
2022Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Rogatchevski, AndreiSammendrag
Pavel Kohout’s bestselling novel The Premonitions of St Clara (Nápady svaté Kláry), whose first German edition was published in
Hamburg in 1980, and first Czech edition in Toronto in 1981, describes a commotion caused by a psychic teenage girl called Clara
in an unnamed Communist-run small provincial Czech town in the mid-1960s. My article traces how the novel and its adaptations
– a 1980 German-language film by Vojtěch Jasný and a 1996 Israeli full-length feature by Ari Folman and Ori Sivan – transform a
host of cultural topoi across a transnational setting, for different reasons and to varying effects. Such topoi include, among others,
the clairvoyant child; the lustful male villain; and the unbeliever to whom the existence of the supernatural is eventually proven.
Although Kohout’s book and its derivatives do not involve vampires, doppelgängers, pedicides and haunted castles, in my opinion,
they nevertheless qualify as (neo-)Gothic, because of the book’s and the films’ Gothic-like focus on remote settings (such as the
Czech or Israeli backwaters) and on the mysterious, the violent and the macabre (as some of the female teenager’s prophesiescome-true entail a flood and an earthquake).
Beskrivelse
Source at http://www.kinokultura.com/.
Forlag
Watershed Media Centre, BristolSitering
Rogatchevski A. ‘Neo-Gothic Clairvoyance and Palingenetic Myth in Late Soviet Czechoslovakia and Post-Soviet Israel: Pavel Kohout’s The Premonitions of St Clara (1980) and Its Film Adaptations’. KinoKultura. 2022;20Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)