Monday, Feb 10, 2014 01:48 PM EST
Was Yulia Lipnitskaya’s “Schindler’s List” skating routine tasteless?
The Russian skating star dressed as the "girl in the red coat." Talk about kitsch
Topics:
Yulia Lipnitskaya,
schindler's list,
2014 Olympics,
Figure skating,
Winter Olympics 2014, Entertainment News
The
15-year-old Russian skater Yulia Lipnitskaya already has won a gold
medal at the Olympics as part of the team figure skating competition.
But her marquee performance, with its nods to “Schindler’s List,” raises
questions of taste and respect.
The music from Steven Spielberg’s 1993 Holocaust drama is instantly recognizable in Lipnitskaya’s program. Recognizable, too, is Lipnitskaya’s dress, a visual nod to the “girl in the red coat,” one of the only objects in the film depicted using color. On film, the girl in the red coat is killed, an innocent victim of the Nazis; in real life, the girl in the red dress triumphs on ice.
Whatever one thinks of the film, this is kitsch of the highest order. “Schindler’s List” is, like many of Spielberg’s movies, emotionally manipulative in the manner it uses music and symbolism to evoke a reaction. But it also does the work of depicting horrors in context, and the emotions it evokes are about something. Lipnitskaya’s routine, technically accomplished though it is, refers to the most memorable aspects of a popular movie about the Holocaust to make no statement other than “It would be nice if you cried at this reference to an existing work of art.”
In his novel “The Unbearable Lightness of Being,” Milan Kundera defined “kitsch” this way:
Daniel D'Addario is a staff reporter for Salon's entertainment section. Follow him on Twitter @DPD_
The music from Steven Spielberg’s 1993 Holocaust drama is instantly recognizable in Lipnitskaya’s program. Recognizable, too, is Lipnitskaya’s dress, a visual nod to the “girl in the red coat,” one of the only objects in the film depicted using color. On film, the girl in the red coat is killed, an innocent victim of the Nazis; in real life, the girl in the red dress triumphs on ice.
Whatever one thinks of the film, this is kitsch of the highest order. “Schindler’s List” is, like many of Spielberg’s movies, emotionally manipulative in the manner it uses music and symbolism to evoke a reaction. But it also does the work of depicting horrors in context, and the emotions it evokes are about something. Lipnitskaya’s routine, technically accomplished though it is, refers to the most memorable aspects of a popular movie about the Holocaust to make no statement other than “It would be nice if you cried at this reference to an existing work of art.”
In his novel “The Unbearable Lightness of Being,” Milan Kundera defined “kitsch” this way:
“Kitsch causes two tears to flow in quick succession. The first tear says: How nice to see children running on the grass!The Lipnitskaya routine follows this definition. It is beautiful to watch the young Lipnitskaya skate, and it is cathartic to refer to “Schindler’s List,” a universally understood signifier for the Holocaust. How nice to be moved, together with all mankind, at a girl skating while dressed as a fictitious Holocaust victim! (How much easier, too, to surface a memory of the Holocaust and feel sad but also happy for Lipnitskaya, than to contemplate man’s capacity for evil.) It’s a low-calorie emotional trigger, relying on the surface level of someone else’s complicated and difficult art to trigger the viewer into an emotional response.
The second tear says: How nice to be moved, together with all mankind, by children running on the grass!
It is the second tear that makes kitsch kitsch.”
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