01293nam0 22003493i 450 PUV042468920231121125615.08883530047888353376320200729d1999 ||||0itac50 baitaitz01i xxxe z01nC'era una volta il telefoninoun'indagine socio-semioticaGianfranco Marronecon due saggi di Nicola Dusi e Federico MontanariRomaMeltemi\1999!207 p.ill.19 cm.˜Le œsocietà9001VIA00709042001 ˜Le œsocietà9Telefoni cellulariDiffusioneAspetti socio-culturaliFIRCFIC109945I302.23521Marrone, GianfrancoCFIV022766070144727Montanari, Federico <1962- >CFIV083387Dusi, NicolaPUVV221380ITIT-0120200729IT-FR0017 Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio ApreaFR0017 PUV0424689Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio Aprea 52MAG 5/1846 52FC 0000006895 VMB RS A 2020072920200729 52C'era una volta il telefonino901237UNICAS05644nam 22006732 450 991014943190332120210519110057.01-78204-843-X10.1515/9781782048435(CKB)3710000000929632(MiAaPQ)EBC4591817(UkCbUP)CR9781782048435(DE-B1597)676942(DE-B1597)9781782048435(EXLCZ)99371000000092963220170215d2016|||| uy| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierContinuity and crisis in German cinema, 1928-1936 /edited by Barbara Hales, Mihaela Petrescu, and Valerie Weinstein[electronic resource]Rochester, New York :Camden House,2016.1 online resource (vi, 333 pages) digital, PDF file(s)Screen cultures: German film and the visualTitle from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 07 May 2021).1-57113-935-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I. Politics -- 1: “Timid Heresies”: Werner Hochbaum’s Razzia in St. Pauli (1932) -- 2: Film as Pedagogy in Late Weimar and Early Nazi Cinema: The Role of the Street in Mobilizing the Spectator -- Part II. The Economy -- 3: “A Fairy Tale for Grown-ups”: Financial and Cinematic Crises in Die Koffer des Herrn O.F. (1931) -- 4: “Denn Gold ist Glück und Fluch dieser Welt”: Examining the Trope of “Gold” in Gold (1934) and Der Kaiser von Kalifornien (1936) -- Part III. Concepts of Race and Ethnicity -- 5: Degenerate Disease and the Doctors of Death: Racial Hygiene Film as Propaganda in Weimar and Early Nazi Germany -- 6: “White Jews” and Dark Continents: Capitalist Critique and Its Racial Undercurrents in Detlef Sierck’s April! April! (1935) -- Part IV. Genre Cinema -- 7: The Zigeunerdrama Reloaded: Leni Riefenstahl’s Fantasy Gypsies and Sacrificial Others -- 8: Regaining Mobility: The Aviator in Weimar Mountain Films -- Part V. Making Cinema Stars -- 9: Brigitte Helm and Germany’s Star System in the 1920s and 1930s -- 10: Foreign Attractions: Czech Stars and Ethnic Masquerade -- Part VI. Film Technologies -- 11: Objects in Motion: Hans Richter’s Vormittagsspuk (1928) and the Crisis of Avant-Garde Film -- 12: Seeing Crisis in Harry Piel’s Ein Unsichtbarer geht durch die Stadt (1933) -- Part VII. German-International Film Relations -- 13: Playing the European Market: Marcel L’Herbier’s L’Argent (1928), Ufa, and German-French Film Relations -- 14: A Serious Man? Ernst Lubitsch’s Antiwar Film The Man I Killed (aka Broken Lullaby, USA 1932) -- Selected Bibliography -- Notes on the Contributors -- IndexHitler'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 theirrelationship to the various crises of the years 1928 to 1936 in 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 ofinterest 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 Hnyuel, 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. MihaelaPetrescu 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.Screen cultures.Motion picturesGermanyHistory20th centuryMotion picturesPolitical aspectsGermanyHistory20th centuryMotion picturesSocial aspectsGermanyHistory20th centuryEuropean history.German cinema.Hitler.Nazism.World War II.anthropology.film scholarship.film studies.history of film.media studies.sociology.twentieth century Germany.Motion picturesHistoryMotion picturesPolitical aspectsHistoryMotion picturesSocial aspectsHistory791.430943Hales Barbara1962-Weinstein Valerie1971-Petrescu Mihaela1974-UkCbUPUkCbUPBOOK9910149431903321Continuity and crisis in German cinema, 1928-19362548076UNINA