Tchitcherine
Michael Bailey
michael.lee.bailey at gmail.com
Tue Oct 20 03:21:10 CDT 2009
Daniel, my understanding is there was a Tchitcherine, a Russian diplomat, and
GR carefully distinguishes the Tchitcherine in the text from the
historical Tchitcherine.
As to similar sounding names, your references are interesting -
I hope you make good use of the p-list stipend and add enough argumentation
and background to make them *compelling*.
On Mon, Oct 19, 2009 at 12:47 AM, Daniel Cape <daniel.cape at gmail.com> wrote:
> Reading "Celluloid Apocalypse" by Ian Christie, in an edited volume
> called _The Apocalypse and the Shape of Things to Come_ and I stumble
> across this about Ibanez' novel _The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse_
> and the film adaptation by Rex Ingram:
>
> "...an important feature of both novel and film, which connects these
> to an earlier allegorical tradition, is the motif of the 'four
> horsemen', linked to a recurrent prophetic figure, Tchernoff, whose
> name suggests a reference to the Russian mystical tradition of
> Theosophy or of Gurdjieff. [...] And in a trope repeated forty years
> years later by Tarkovsky in _Ivan's Childhood_ , Dürer's famous book
> of Apocalypse woodcuts is shown by Tchernoff to to the hero, Julio,
> immediately before the horsemen appear..." (326).
>
> A quick google reveals the involvement of a German spy Tchernine and a
> valet called Tchernoff in the Rasputin/End-of-the-Tsar events in
> Russia (Wiliam Le Queux, _The Minister of Evil: The Secret History of
> Rasputin's Betrayal of Russia_).
>
> Immediately I wondered if our man in the Zone Tchitcherine in GR is
> somehow tied up in all this (of course he is!)... Can anyone explicate
> this link?
>
>
--
--- "Bearing in mind that either I don't know
or it'll be my ass if I tell you, what is it, man?" - Coy Harlingen
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