@article{Amacher_Aunoble_2020, title={Introduction : Divided Memories, Shared Memories, Poland, Russia, Ukraine: History mirrored in Literature and Cinema}, volume={5}, url={https://oap.unige.ch/journals/connexe/article/view/247}, DOI={10.5077/journals/connexe.2019.e247}, abstractNote={<div class="page" title="Page 2"> <div class="layoutArea"> <div class="column"> <p>In 2017, general-interest magazines illustrated the centenary of the Russian Revolution with stills from Eisenstein’s October [Октябрь] (1927). One strikingly showed soldiers rushing across a square to represent the storming of the Winter Palace by Bolshevik fighters on 7 November 1917. In reality, the actual assault was slow and even laborious. But for Western audiences, this film sequence has become an archive image, a piece of history. This type of substitution of artistic representation for historical reality conflicts with the positive construction of our knowledge of the past. Indeed, historians long refused to include literature and films in their historical research, as well as art in general, which has been mainly analysed from an aesthetic point of view.</p> </div> </div> </div>}, journal={Connexe : les espaces postcommunistes en question(s)}, author={Amacher, Korine and Aunoble, Eric}, year={2020}, month={oct.}, pages={2–9} }