Debating club
Reference:
Rozin, V. M.
Reflections on Modern Art
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 7-17.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64234
Abstract:
The article is devoted to the essence of art in general and special features of modern art
I particular. The author differentiates between traditional art, Gestell art and post-modernity art.
Gestell art has the following typical features: breaking of old bonds and relations of art with other
spheres of life (for example, disruption of the ‘artist – audience’ communication and transformation
of the ‘artistic reality – regular reality’ relation), the crisis of the classical concept of art (including the
terms of artwork and esthetic subject), definition of functions of art in terms of Gestell, i.e. linking art
to regular life (art as creating a special environment for working, as a special social optics and a form
of organization of life and activity) and finally, technification of art when art is started to be perceived
as a special semiotic and psychotechnical technology. An important mission of modern art is to help
human to revive his feelings and emotions and the other mission of art is to create special conditions
for his traveling through unusual and interesting worlds. The second part of the article is devoted to
the analysis of the essence of the ‘Science Art’ work where art, technology and science increasingly
interlock within the framework of modern alternative experimental art. In order to achieve the above
mentioned goals, the author carries out problematisation, implements methods of comparative analysis
of historical forms of art and performs conceptual analysis. As a result, he manages to differentiate
between and define traditional art, Gestell art and post-modernity art as well as to touch upon the
problem of responsibility of a modern artist. According to the author, the modern artist faces a principal
choice: what life style and future will he work for? A new stage in the development of art assumes
that we will review and build new relations with art, technology, science and ourselves.
Keywords:
art, Gestell, post-moderity, interpretation, life-sustaining activity, implementation, reality, science, technology, imitation.
Culture and cultures
Reference:
Chrenov, N. A.
Borders of Communication Technologies’
Escalation: Nostalgia for Space
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 18-36.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64235
Abstract:
The author of the article touches upon the issue about the relation between culture and civilization
that are being viewed in terms of development of communication processes throughout history.
The importance of this problem is especially recognized due to the appearance of TV broadcast at the
second half of the XXth century and the Internet over the last decade. However, the only provision being
actually recognized is that in actual practice communication has been existing since the times of appearance
of the written language. The history of mass communication relates to the successive involvement
of different technologies in the cultural process. Quite often these technologies take communication processes
beyond the borders of culture. Technology represents civilization preferences. However, the other
side of mass communication addresses culture which, in accordance with Johan Huizinga’s statement, ‘is
born in personality and therefore retains its health in personality’. This discordance between preferences
of civilization and culture plays the decisive role in raising the problem about personal potential of mass
communication. Where mass communication expresses preferences of civilization, personality plays the
role of an object in the communication process. Civilization tends to expand the communication space
and therefore to involve as many people as possible into the communication process. Mass communication
is meant to solve the problems that usually arise in the history of civilization when mass societies
appear and processes of massification of culture are started. Personality becomes an actor of communication
processes only when technology answers the preferences of culture but does not take communication
beyond the borders of culture as it often happens and what mass media such as cinematograph, TV
broadcast and the Internet often demonstrates. Sometimes it takes too long for the critical evaluation of
the new communication media created on the basis of advanced technologies to be formed. So the humanity
is often too excited about the opportunities that the new mean of communication may offer. Such
statement of the question makes it necessary to undertake further historical researches of communication
but not in the apologetic meaning as it often happens.
Keywords:
globalization, individualization, massification, civilization, mass communication, mass media, book printing, culture, written language, cinematograph.
Culture and cultures
Reference:
Chertok, M. D.
The Philosophy of March
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 37-61.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64236
Abstract:
As a musical composition, march is a piece of music of a certain form and with a certain regular
rhythm that is written for marching to and satisfying esthetic needs of a listener. In his search for answers to the
question about the role and place of march in our life, the author faced the absence of methodological concepts
on the matter and therefore chose to study the military march in all its kinds and forms. The subject of the research
is the particular role of march as a piece of music in the life of an individual and ethnos, in the process of
up-bringing, philosophical achievement of one’s personhood and development of culture. The research method
is the search for and interpretation of information about the military music in general and military march in
particular as well as comparison of discovered facts deriving from different epochs and cultures about military
science, raising a warrior, formation and development of the army and attitude to music as an important element
of culture. The novelty of the present research is in the attempt to provide a philosophical interpretation of
the phenomenon of march, to compare this musical genre with other active branches of art and to analyze philosophical
reflections on the role and influence of military march on the national culture. The author of the research
article suggests that we should pay more attention to this unique phenomenon that has become not only the kind
of musical composition but also the genre which, besides its ‘official’ purpose, has also created the grounds for
further development of musical art and division of music into different musical genres.
Keywords:
march, music, philosophy, war, religion, rites, musical instruments, state, army, peace.
Culture and authority
Reference:
Lipskiy, V. N.
On Mutual Relations Between the Artist
and the Government in Russia
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 62-67.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64237
Abstract:
The subject under review is mutual relations and interactions between the artist and the government.
Special attention is paid to the transformation of the dominant, in the author’s opinion, model of the opposition
between the artist and the government that was established during the pre-Soviet and Soviet periods of
social development. Within the framework of the aforesaid model, relations between the artist and the government
have become somewhat neutral without direct opposition between the aforesaid institutions at the present
stage of development. Moreover, the author views another model of mutual relations between the artist and the
government. Analyzing the latter, the author, on one hand, shows the singularity of American and Soviet popular
cultures and, on the other hand, views the need for active influence on products of Russian popular culture
by the government for the purpose of formation of national values. Methodological basis of the research is the
neo-classical ontology of relations and interactions. Research methods used by the author include both general
research procedures such as historical and logical methods and method of comparison and special research
methods, in particular, the method of hermeneutic analysis. The author defines and analyzes peculiarities of the
‘neutral’ model of relations between the artist and the government and proves it to be the dominant model in
today’s Russia. The author also shows that the process of artistic reflection is mostly the process of formation of
new forms during which the artist views the objective reality in accordance with the beauty standards and Universal
laws. The main conclusion made by the author is that in today’s Russia changes in social conditions lead
to the complication of forms of interaction between the artist and the government.
Keywords:
artist, power (government), popular culture, creativity, opposition, de-socialization, art, culture, model, traditions.
Culture and Cult
Reference:
Belyaev, V. A.
Has Religion Learnt the Lesson Taught
by the Modernity? On the Question about the Position
of a Religious Human in Post-Secular World
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 68-79.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64238
Abstract:
Thoughts and reflections provided in this article were initiated by the discussions about the role of
religion in the modern (post-secular) world. Activation of religious beliefs related thereto and initiated thereby
takes different forms and degrees. One of the position of such post-secular religious approach is the denial
of Modernity as it is which has its meaning and purpose related to the religious truth and religious methods
of life arrangement. This position can be called ‘anti-modernistic approach’. Anti-modernistic religious approach
views modernity and secularization as the desire to interpret the truth of low significance as the truth
of maximum significance. Therefore, modernity is viewed by the anti-modernistic philosophy as an easy target
for criticizing. Accoring to the author, this position can be illustrated by A. Kyrlezhev’s article ‘Post-Secular
Conceptualization of Religion’. In this regard, the author sets a goal to define the ‘minimal’ rights of modernity
and secularization that can’t be denied by the religious approach. In other words, the author tries to understand
the ‘lesson’ taught by modernity that today’s religious community has to learn in order to maintain a
more constructive approach. At first the author analyzed Kyrlezhev’s article and appraised his aspirations.
Then the author showed the two directions towards finding the essential ‘truth’ of secularization, build the
model of the ‘minimal modernity’ based on that truth and summarized the results of his research by describing
the ‘symbol of faith’ of a modern post-secular human. When building the model of the modernity, the author
based himself on his own concept of modernity as the interculture. When the author analyzed creation of a
modern constitutional democratic state as a result of modernity, he referred to Jurgen Habermas’ works.
Keywords:
culture, interculture, secularization, post-secular epoch, religion, ideology, New Art (Modernity), Post-Modernity, minimal modernity, symbol of faith.
Historical culturology and the history of culture
Reference:
Salnikova, E. V.
‘Archeology’ of the Line of Television Programs
and its Role in the Development of Visual Culture
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 80-92.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64239
Abstract:
The article is devoted to the phenomenon of composition of television programs which
is usually called ‘the line of television programs’. The author describes the prehistory of the process
of composing television content in the theater culture, studies the principles of composition of
the ancient and medieval performances, Renaissance civic and court theatre and entertainment in
the Western Europe and Russia of the early modern period. The author studies the phenomenon of
co-existence of theatre acts and plays of different genres and styles within the framework of one
performance in the old Russian forms of entertainment, for example, in Skomorokh performances,
puppet theatre, bear-baiting and school theatre. The author also compares entertainment performances
of different national cultures where actors were not involved such as the Russian raree show
and English Eidophusikon. In her research the author combines methods of cultural research and
art history and extensively uses typological analysis of the phenomena that are related to different
national cultures. The modern stage of the development of screen culture is perceived as the latest
modification of the entertainment art closely connected with the pre-screen forms of art. The
author describes the two patterns of organization of the conditional ‘play’ reality. The first pattern
involves the presence of a solid form-containing statement that can and should be perceived only as
an integral and successively developing phenomenon. The second pattern is a sequence of different
form-containing statements that do not have to be related in their narrative. These ‘play’ statements
do not have to be of the same genre or style. The line of television programs relates to the second
pattern of the conditional entertainment reality that has been quite popular in the history of culture.
The author concludes that the composition of television programs has a traditional pattern as well
as the demonstrative nature of creative impersonal processes while there is the continuous sequence of television forms and frustration of responsive creative needs of the audience. This contradiction
of the television art is solved within the framework of the computer culture, the latter being a more
complicated and interactive screen form of art.
Keywords:
cultural research, ‘archeology’ of mass media, television, theatre, miracle-play, raree show, cinema at the fair, line of television programs, interactivity, entertainment.
Culture of art and the process of creation
Reference:
Shapinskaya E.N.
Musical Fantasy on the Theme
of «The Tempest»:
Interpretation of Shakespeare’s Play
by the Language of Modern Opera
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 93-104.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64240
Abstract:
The problem of interpretation of a classical work of art with the help of modern artistic
language has been examined in the paper. Opera “The Tempest” by the contemporary British
composer Thomas Ades based on the play by Shakespeare and its stage representation have been
analysed. The author shows the importance of fantasy element in Shakespeare’s work which helps
the composer to show a number of problems of human existence, morals, power, love in a fairy-tale
form, which accents the universality of these problems. The article also poses the problem of translating
the meanings of the work in a different cultural context and in another cultural form. Methods
of textual analysis of materials concerning the work of Th.Ades and its stage representation have
been used as well as semantic analysis of cultural texts (the literary source and the operatic text).
Elements of comparative study are also present in the paper. The novelty of the research work is
in posing the problem of interpretation of a classical work not only by the language of a different
period, but by another cultural form, which creates a complicated interpretative matrix. The author
introduces into the field of Shakespearean studies the work of Thomas Ades, one of the most interesting
composers of our time, who created an original and talented version of “The tempest” by Shakespeare
for contemporary opera scene.
Keywords:
classic, cultural form, interpretation, music, art culture, image, fantasy, translation, meaning, work problems.
Styles, trends, schools
Reference:
Gularyan, A. B.
The Genre of the ‘Military Utopian Novel’
in Modern Russian Science Fiction
// Culture and Art.
2014. ¹ 1.
P. 105-113.
URL: https://en.nbpublish.com/library_read_article.php?id=64241
Abstract:
One of the most important indicators of a society ready for war is the appearance of scenarios
of a future war in literature. Before the Great Patriotic War the Soviet leadership actively used
the genre of the ‘military utopian novel’ to prepare the public conscience to the war but when the war
was over, the genre of military utopia was prohibited by the public conscience. However, today there
are a great number of books about a forthcoming war being published. This allows to analyze and
classify scenarios of future wars. The majority of typical scenarios is balancing on the ‘to be or not to
be’ edge. Some scenarios can be called pessimistic because they describe the loss of Russia in the future
war. Other scenarios are rather optimistic and propagandize the revival of nation through winning
the war. Generally speaking, except for unrealizable or alternative history scenarios, modern scenarios
of a future war outline the following courses of events: 1) Russia can be involved into a war with
the third countries or alliances as a result of the Ukrainian or Caucasian conflict. The Barents Sea and
the Sea of Okhotsk are also mentioned as the starting point of a future war but less frequently. 2) Most
writers see it as the war between Russia and the United States and their NATO allies although some authors
also suspect the war between Russia and Japan or China. 3) The war is most likely to turn into a
series of interweaved local conflicts. Otherwise a limited or even full-scale exchange of nuclear attacks
may occur. Noteworthy that the Second World War was also meant to be a series of local lightning wars but turned into a global massacre two years after it had started. 4) Most modern writers see the
victory of Russia as a miracle. Writers either describe a desired future that has very little to do with the
reality or use all kinds of ‘magical’ inventions. However, it is better than the decadent’s moods typical
for the same genre of science fiction in the late USSR. 5) Some writers doubt that the modern Russian
leadership is able to firmly and adequately defend the country’s interests using the military force.
6) The majority of writers express the opinion that if Russia loses the war, it will not be only occupied
but also subject to prolonged genocide. Generally speaking, modern scenarios of future wars perform
their main function which is to prepare the public conscience to fighting ‘their own’ war and to mobilize
the public conscience during the ‘period of threat’.
Keywords:
future war, military utopian novel, predictive capabilities, alternative history, alarmism, mobilization of the public conscience, anti-utopia, military alert, literary series, post-apocalypse.