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2013 | 6 | 1 | 91-108

Article title

Michael Powell’s The Thief of Bagdad and Abbas Kiarostami’s A Taste of Cherry: Two Faces of Orientalism

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
British director Michael Powell (1905-1990) and Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami (1940-) share several technical similarities in their filmmaking, most notably an interest in the visual language of still photography, painting and other visual arts, specifically light and colour. They also often comment on the art of film-making and the subject position of the audience as voyeur within their films. With respect to Orientalism - the philosophical and cultural construction that the West overlaid on the East - Powell and Kiarostami can be profitably compared. Powell appears to have accepted uncritically the notion that the East could be characterized by exotic and sensuous otherness, an attitude that is revealed in his approach to The Thief of Bagdad (1940) as escapist fantasy and Black Narcissus (1946) as a farewell to India. Kiarostami, on the other hand, a “real Oriental,” not only rejected the Orientalist paradigm (while simultaneously drawing on its original language and symbols), but also refused to respond to it in the way that other Muslim artists, particularly in the post-Iranian Revolution period, consciously attempted to build a nonwestern cinematic art. His Taste of Cherry (1997), however, does draw on some of the same cultural elements that were borrowed and distorted by the European intellectuals who promulgated the Orientalist and postcolonial world-view

Publisher

Year

Volume

6

Issue

1

Pages

91-108

Physical description

Dates

published
2013-08-01
online
2014-06-04

Contributors

author
  • Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar (Doha, Qatar)

References

  • Christie, Ian. 1998. /iiron's of Desire: The Films of Michael Powell aiid Emeric Pressburger. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Dissanavke, Wimal. 2012. Modem Iranian Cinema and Classical Persian Poetry.
  • Sunday Obsen’er. <http://www.sundayobsenrer.lk/2012/05/27/mon02.asp> (last accessed: 04.04.2013).
  • Ebert. Roger. 1999. Peeping Tom (1960). Sun Times. <http://rogerebert.suntimes>. com.
  • Ebert, Roger. 1998. Taste of Cherry. Sun Times, <http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/> apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/l 9980227/REVIEWS/802270309/1023 (last accessed: 04.04.2013).
  • Elena. Alberto. 2005. The Cinema of Abbas Kiarostami. Trails. Belinda Coombes. London: Saqi.
  • Ishaghpour, Youssef. 2000. Le reel, face, et pile: Le cinema dAbbas Kiarostami. Tours: Farrago.
  • Kiarostami, Abbas. 2001. Walking With the Wind: Poems by Abbas Kiarostami. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Film Archive.
  • Malton, Thomas? 1803. Arabic Life. Steve Art Gallerv LLC. USA. h ttp://mvw.i'n tofineart. com/h tmlimg/im age-47649.h tml.
  • Michalak. Laurence. 2002. The Arab in American Cinema: From Bad to Worse, or Getting Better? Social Studies Review 42 (Fall): 11-17.
  • Mulvey, Laura. 1998. Kiarostami’s Uncertainty Principle. Sight and Sound vol. 8 no. 6: 24-27.
  • The Powell & Pressburger Pages. 2012. Ed. Steve Crook. Fascinating Trivia. <http://www.powell-pressburger.org/Reviews/40_Thief/Thief00.html> (last accessed: 04.04.2013).
  • Powell, Michael. 1992. Million Dollar Movie. New York: Random House.
  • Powell, Michael. 2000 [1986]. A Life in Movies. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Said, Edward. 1978. Orientalism. New York: Pantheon Books.
  • Scorsese, Michael. 2001. DVD Commentary on Black Narcissus. New York: Criterion Collection.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_ausfm-2014-0006
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