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Screening the East Nick Hodgin

Screening the East By Nick Hodgin

Screening the East by Nick Hodgin


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Summary

Screening the East considers German filmmakers' responses to unification. In particular, it traces the representation of the East German community in films made since 1989 and considers whether these narratives challenge or reinforce the notion of a separate East German identity.

Screening the East Summary

Screening the East: Heimat, Memory and Nostalgia in German Film since 1989 by Nick Hodgin

Screening the East considers German filmmakers' responses to unification. In particular, it traces the representation of the East German community in films made since 1989 and considers whether these narratives challenge or reinforce the notion of a separate East German identity. The book identifies and analyses a large number of films, from internationally successful box-office hits, to lesser-known productions, many of which are discussed here for the first time. Providing an insight into the films' historical and political context, it considers related issues such as stereotyping, racism, regional particularism and the Germans' confrontation with the past.

Screening the East Reviews

Hodgin ... brings extensive historical and sociological knowledge to his perceptive discussion of complex topics such as nostalgia for the GDR and debates over how its ambiguous history should be represented ... by bringing to the attention of English-speaking readers many less-known films and filmmakers, this readable study provides a valuable resource on recent German film history. * Choice

This book is highly welcome since so far only few publications on afterlife of the GDR in German film exist. Hodgin's study is based on over eighty films and with that covers two decades (1989 to 2008). This comprehensive body of material and the long period covered make this publication a valuable overview...The author shows with this book a profound knowledge of German film. * H-Net

[This book] is very welcome... and recommended. The well-informed survey at the beginning of it makes it easy for newcomers to the subject as well as experts in various subject areas to find a rewarding access to this topic. This study shows the author's profound knowledge of contemporary German film dealing with the aftermath of the GDR. The comprehensive filmography is remarkable for its socio-political and aesthetic contextualization. A particular merit lies in the inclusion of films that are little know. * H-Soz-u-Kult

...this monograph by the British cultural historian and scholar of film Nick Hodgin is especially welcome. On the basis of a wide range of sources-more than eighty thematically relevant films, some of which are relatively unknown and only accessible with difficulty-it deals with German films produced between 1989 and 2008...Inspired by reading this book, one would like to read more, which suggests that it is worth continuing to work with film as a historical source for recent German history. * German Historical Institute London Bulletin

...contains useful and nuanced readings of the best-known films dealing with themes related to unification, as well as highlighting some equally interesting lesser-known works, in order to provide a rounded picture of German cinema's engagement with these issues in the past 17 years. I am not aware of any other publication that covers such a range of material and this in itself makes the book a valuable contribution to the field. * David Clarke, University of Bath

This is an extremely rich study of the representation of east German identity and the former GDR in post-unification cinema. The author clearly has an encyclopaedic knowledge of the films of this period ... Hodgin's book breaks genuinely new ground. * Sean Allan, University of Warwick

The book reveals an excellent knowledge of German culture and cinema, and combines methodological soundness with an ability to talk about films in a lively way free of jargon. Screening the East should not be missed by anybody interested in German cinema and culture, as well as cinema as discourse on history and space. * Ewa Mazierska, University of Central Lancashire

Screening the East provides insightful readings of contemporary classics such as Good Bye, Lenin! and The Lives of Others alongside films which complement these popular memories of life on the other side of the Wall by an eastern and, arguably, more authentic perspective. This is an engaging and important contribution to German cinema and cultural studies, providing a wealth of contextual detail. * Daniela Berghahn, Reader in Film Studies, Royal Holloway, University of London

About Nick Hodgin

Nick Hodgin teaches German and Film Studies at the University of Lancaster (UK). He has published widely on German film and German cultural studies, including the co-edited volume on GDR culture, The GDR Remembered. Representing the East German tate since 1989 (Camden House, 2011). His current projects focus on visual culture in the GDR, international documentary cinema, and contemporary German filmmakers.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements

Introduction

  • Films and Identity: Reflecting the Nation
  • Heimat, Memory and Nostalgia

Chapter 1. Mapping Identity

  • After Unity: Stereotypes and Dissent
  • A Post-GDR Identity?
  • Ostalgie - Recharging the Batteries of Identity

Chapter 2. Heimat Stories: East Meets West

  • The Heimatfilm: Past Genres for Present Tensions
  • Heimatas Refuge
  • Locating Heimat in the GDR
  • Screening Heimat in the GDR
  • Contesting Heimat
  • An Island Mentality:D Brocken
  • Heimat Found?Go Trabi Go II. Das war der wilde Osten
  • Conclusion: Triumph of the Underdog

Chapter 3. Lost Landscapes

  • Provincial Fears and Loathing
  • Escaping Heimat
  • Failed Utopia?
  • Paradise Lost?
  • Post-unification Landscapes: Charting Memory
  • Stories from the Margins
  • Still Life: Representing the East
  • Memory and Loss
  • Neben der Zeit: Memories in Ruins, Ruined Memories
  • Landscape and Meaning

Chapter 4. At the Back of Beyond: Heimat East

  • On the Road Again
  • The Occidental Tourists: Wir Koennen auch anders
  • Resisting Stereotypes
  • On the Run
  • The Community as Mob
  • Borderland/Bored Land
  • Community Undone

Chapter 5. Berlin: Disorientation/Reorientation

  • After Unification: Lapsus memoriae?
  • No-Man's Land
  • Orientations
  • Haunted by the Past
  • Disorientation
  • New Cartographies: Berlin is in Germany

Chapter 6. Good Bye, Ostalgie?

  • Commodifying the Past
  • Disneyland GDR
  • Reimagining the GDR
  • Recycling the Past: Der Zimmerspringbrunnen
  • Reconstructing the GDR
  • Between Ostalgie and Westalgie
  • Fade to Grey: NVA
  • Stasiland GDR

Conclusion

  • A Community Apart?
  • Towards Normalization?

Filmography
Bibliography
Index

Additional information

NLS9781782381341
9781782381341
1782381341
Screening the East: Heimat, Memory and Nostalgia in German Film since 1989 by Nick Hodgin
New
Paperback
Berghahn Books
2013-05-01
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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