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The Routledge Companion to European Cinema: Routledge Media and Cultural Studies Companions

Editat de Gábor Gergely, Susan Hayward
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 mai 2024
Presenting new and diverse scholarship, this wide-ranging collection of 43 original chapters asks what European cinema tells us about Europe.
The book engages with European cinema that attends to questions of European colonial, racialized and gendered power; seeks to decentre Europe itself (not merely its putative centres); and interrogate Europe’s various conceptualizations from a variety of viewpoints. It explores the broad, complex and heterogeneous community/ies produced in and by European films, taking in Kurdish, Hollywood and Singapore cinema as comfortably as the cinema of Poland, Spanish colonial films or the European gangster genre. Chapters cover numerous topics, including individual films, film movements, filmmakers, stars, scholarship, representations and identities, audiences, production practices, genres and more, all analysed in their context(s) so as to construct an image of Europe as it emerges from Europe’s film corpus.
The Companion opens the study of European cinema to a broad readership and is ideal for students and scholars in film, European studies, queer studies and cultural studies, as well as historians with an interest in audio-visual culture, nationalism and transnationalism, and those working in language-based area studies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032136714
ISBN-10: 1032136715
Pagini: 484
Ilustrații: 64
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.9 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Media and Cultural Studies Companions

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Notă biografică

Gábor Gergely is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Lincoln, UK. He has published on Hungarian, French and Italian cinema, on European actors in Hollywood and he is the editor of the Stardom special issue of Studies in Eastern European Cinema.
Susan Hayward is Emerita Professor of Cinema Studies at Exeter University, UK. She is the author of several books on French cinema and Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts (now in its sixth edition).

Cuprins

Introduction   Part I: A first dialogical cluster: European cinema speaking about Europe: Through explorations of sexualities, identities, migration and the crisis of modernity  1. Post-communist nostalgia in new Bulgarian cinema as a social critique: Mediated post-communist nostalgia  2. Slow Slippy: Still shite being Scottish? T2: Trainspotting and the ‘Scottish European’  3. Beauty and historical understanding in Suspiria and Cold War  4. ‘Europe was built on blood’: Christian Petzold as a European filmmaker  5. Europe wounded? Politics of hope and resistance in Vincent Dieutre’s Orlando Ferito (2013)  6. Lilting and the entangled temporalities of Europe(an cinema)  7. New ways of looking: The case of Maren Ade, Valeska Grisebach and Małgorzata Szumowska  8. The ebbs and flows of girlhood experience across European cinema  9.  ‘Dream on princess’: Cultural value, gender politics and the Hungarian film canon through the documentary Pretty Girls  10. European ecology-documentaries as performative exchange  11. Following the flâneur Hulot in Playtime: Soundscape of the new Paris  12. Ágata’s (filmmaking) girlfriends: The new wave of women directors in Catalonia  13. The Bourne multiplicity: Quantum Europeanness in the Bourne films (2002-2016)  14. Noisy presences in contemporary European Cinema: Paris est une fête: un film en 18 vagues  15. Gay male sex, carnal knowledge and realism in contemporary French cinema  16. Eden is West, Europe as a magic trick   Part II: A second dialogical cluster: Cinema and its industry, national transnationalisms: Actors, studios and cross-overs  17. Omar Sharif: A European Middle Eastern star  18. Weakened nationalism and thickened time: Interrogating the position of Kurdish cinema within European cinema discussions  19. Why small European film industries remake each other’s successes: The case of the Low Countries  20. European collaboration after World War Two: A Tale of Five Cities (M. Tully, R. Marcellini, W. Staudte, G. von Cziffra, E. E. Reinert, 19481951)  21. A film ‘highly offensive to our nation’: Stanley Kubrick’s Paths of Glory (1957), censorship, and militaristic representations of post-war Europe  22. Europe comes to Hollywood: The silent era, 1912—1927  23. The non-professional actor in European cinema  24. The (cultural) politics of international co-production: Morocco and Europe  25. British comedy in a foreign light: Looking at the trope of British comedy through the lens of émigré filmmakers  26. Corporate consolidation, artistic conservatism and the persistence of Hollywood: The European film industry, 20062020  27. ‘Boyish’ women and female soldiers: British gender disguise comedies between the world wars  28. Fred Zinnemann: A Hollywood director who never leaves Europe   Part III: A third dialogical cluster: European cinema and the myth of a unifying and pluralist Europe: Through explorations of borders, genres and histories  29. Framing fundamentalism in contemporary European film  30. Gangster films reloaded: European values and the criminal spectre of late modernity  31.  Films at the intersection of Europe, the Balkans and transgender visibility: A sketch map  32. Two-speed economic systems and bipolarity in the European Union: Frontier spaces in Valeska Grisebach’s Western  33. Film topography and national belonging: Hungarian Jewishness and the high mountains  34. Identity and belonging in the bordered spaces of Gatlif’s Indignados (2012) and Geronimo (2014)  35.  Accented silences: The aesthetics of displacement in diasporic post-Yugoslav cinema  36. Resisting the traps of hegemony: Variation in contemporary German queer of color cinema  37. Lisbon on film 1980-2020: Locating Europe  38. ‘We live like swine and die like swine, because we mean nothing to each other’: The little person, the state and nationhood in contemporary Russian film  39. Family, memories and borders: Europe in the films of Stephan Komandarev  40. Neoliberal authorship: Auteur theory and European art cinema in 2021 — The example of Paweł Pawlikowski  41. Queer bodies and the death drive: Gender and sexuality in Italian giallo  42. Political discourse and rhetoric: Challenging twenty-first century populism in Chez nous/This Is Our Land  43.  Recovering memory, reasserting Europeanness. Modern Convivencia and Hispanotropicalism in Palm Trees in the Snow (2015) and Neckan (2014)

Descriere

Presenting new and diverse scholarship, this wide-ranging collection of forty-three original chapters asks what European cinema tells us about Europe.