Continuity and Crisis in German Cinema, 1928-1936
Title Details

344 Pages

22.8 x 15.2 cm

19 b/w illus.

Series: Screen Cultures: German Film and the Visual

Series Vol. Number: 15

Imprint: Camden House

Continuity and Crisis in German Cinema, 1928-1936

Edited by Barbara Hales, Mihaela Petrescu and Valerie Weinstein

  • Description
  • Contents
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New essays examining the differences and commonalities between late Weimar-era and early Nazi-era German cinema against a backdrop of the crises of that time.



Hitler's Machtergreifung, or seizure of power, on January 30, 1933, marked the end of the Weimar Republic and the beginning of the Third Reich, and German film scholarship has generally accepted this date as the break between Weimar and Nazi-era film as well. This collection of essays interrogates the continuities and discontinuities in German cinema before and after January 1933 and their relationship to the various crises of the years 1928 to 1936in seven areas: politics, the economy, concepts of race and ethnicity, the making of cinema stars, genre cinema, film technologies and aesthetics, and German-international film relations. Focusing both on canonical and lesser-known works, the essays analyze a representative sample of films and genres from the period. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of Weimar and Third Reich cinema and of the sociopolitical, economic, racial, artistic, and technological spheres in both late Weimar and the early Third Reich, as well as to film scholars in general.

Contributors: Paul Flaig, Margrit Frölich, Barbara Hales, Anjeana Hans, Bastian Heinsohn, Brook Henkel,Kevin B. Johnson, Owen Lyons, Richard W. McCormick, Kalani Michell, Mihaela Petrescu, Christian Rogowski, Valerie Weinstein, Wilfried Wilms.

Barbara Hales is Associate Professor of History at the University of Houston-Clear Lake. Mihaela Petrescu is Visiting Lecturer at the University of Pittsburgh. Valerie Weinstein is Assistant Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and German Studies at the University of Cincinnati.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
"Timid Heresies": Werner Hochbaum's Razzia in St. Pauli (1932) - Christian Rogowski
Film as Pedagogy in Late Weimar and Early Nazi Cinema: The Role of the Street in Mobilizing the Spectator - Bastian Heinsohn
"A Fairytale for Grown-ups": Financial and Cinematic Crises in Die Koffer des Herrn O.F. (1931) - Paul Flaig
"Denn Gold ist Glück und Fluch dieser Welt": Examining the Trope of "Gold" in Gold (1934) and Der Kaiser von Kalifornien (1936) - Owen Lyons
Degenerate Disease and the Doctors of Death: Racial Hygiene Film as Propaganda in Weimar and Early Nazi Germany - Barbara Hales
"White Jews" and Dark Continents: Capitalist Critique and Its Racial Undercurrents in Detlef Sierck's April! April! (1935) - Valerie Weinstein
The Zigeunerdrama Reloaded: Leni Riefenstahl's Fantasy Gypsies and Sacrificial Others - Anjeana Hans
Regaining Mobility: The Aviator in Weimar Mountain Films - Wilfried Wilms
Brigitte Helm and Germany's Star System in the 1920s and 1930s - Mihaela Petrescu
Foreign Attractions: Czech Stars and Ethnic Masquerade - Kevin B. Johnson
Objects in Motion: Hans Richter's Vormittagsspuk (1928) and the Crisis of Avant-Garde Film - Brook Henkel
Seeing Crisis in Harry Piel's Ein Unsichtbarer geht durch die Stadt (1933) - Kalani Michell
Playing the European Market: Marcel L'Herbier's L'Argent (1928), Ufa, and German-French Film Relations - Margrit Frölich
A Serious Man? Ernst Lubitsch's Anti-War Film The Man I Killed (a.k.a. Broken Lullaby, USA 1932) - Richard W. McCormick
Selected Bibliography
Notes on the Contributors
Index
"[A] newly nuanced portrait of the interruptions and interconnections between the film cultures of late Weimar and early National Socialist Germany. . . . Each of the essays in the volume will find an eager readership for its particular topic; taken together, the articles . . . promise to have a significant impact on how German Studies as a field understands the critical period between the end of Weimar democracy and the rise of Nazism -- as an era of 'fluid' movement as well as crisis." Jennifer Kapczynski, MONATSHEFTE
"[O]ffers several interesting essays. . . ." FILMBLATT
"[S]ubstantial and innovative . . . . [O]ffers a fresh and interesting approach to two film-making periods that have intrigued academics for decades. The volume exposes countless surprising links between Weimar and Nazi culture and society that cause us fundamentally to rethink our understanding of the period covered." MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW

Hardcover

9781571139351

October 2016

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Ebook (EPDF)

9781782048435

October 2016

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Title Details

344 Pages

2.28 x 1.52 cm

19 b/w illus.

Series: Screen Cultures: German Film and the Visual

Series Vol. Number: 15

Imprint: Camden House