Life Wins in the West. Agnieszka Holland’s East European Interpretation of The Secret Garden Cover Image

Life Wins in the West. Agnieszka Holland’s East European Interpretation of The Secret Garden
Life Wins in the West. Agnieszka Holland’s East European Interpretation of The Secret Garden

Author(s): Ewa ŁUKASZYK
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Film / Cinema / Cinematography
Published by: Editura Universităţii »Alexandru Ioan Cuza« din Iaşi
Keywords: The Secret Garden; Agnieszka Holland; European values; Western civilization; culture of death;

Summary/Abstract: The author of this essay interprets Agnieszka Holland’s cinematographic adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s The Secret Garden as a work of an East-European creator musing on the essence of Western civilisation and comments on it in the context of the present-day questioning of the European unity, values, and standards in Polish culture. In the analysis of Holland’s cinematographic version of the novel, a special relevance is given to cultural (in)visibility of the dangers of pregnancy and childbirth. The East-West divide is interpreted in terms of divergent conceptualisations of the major human transformative actions: work and sacrifice. In the multimodal idiom of Holland’s film, the music composed by Zbigniew Preisner occupies a special place. The East-European interpretation of the children’s classic promotes a vision of Englishness (treated as a pars pro toto exemplification of the broader concept of “the West”) as a space of resilience and triumphant life, against manipulative messages presenting the West as a space of corruption and “culture of death”.

  • Issue Year: 2/2023
  • Issue No: 32
  • Page Range: 161-172
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English
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