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Overview

An insightful overview of an important era in cinema.

The title of this collection echoes Siegfried Kracauer’s statement that the lavish movie palaces of 1920s Germany served to stimulate peripheral vision and thus prevent the audience from being absorbed by the spectacle itself. In consideration of questions concerning spatial transformations in and around Weimar cinema, the eight essays in this volume, though some more explicitly than others, have Kracauer as their interlocutor. The first major critic of classic German cinema, Kracauer is patron of the optics that seeks insight on the periphery, inviting the analysis of those other spaces that are implicated, if not present, in the films themselves.

The films treated in this volume include such Expressionist mainstays as Lang’s Metropolis and Murnau’s Nosferatu as well as generally less familiar works, e.g., Ruttman’s Berlin, Symphony of a City, Jessner’s Backstairs, Berger’s Day and Night, and the mountain films of Fanck and Riefenstahl. Among the "hidden stages" analyzed are amusement parks, carnivals, department stores, train compartments, city streets, the womb, the theater, the chamber, basement apartments—and ultimately Neubabelsberg, the gargantuan studio-complex near Berlin where so many of these peripheral spaces came to be simulated.

With references that range from set architecture to Christmas celebrations, from the poetry of Rilke to chamber music, from the introduction of sound to Macy’s parades, and from an "urban unconscious" to a "cinematic sublime," Peripheral Visions is a richly nuanced collection that will be of lasting interest to students and scholars of film and German cultural studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814329283
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2001
Series: Kritik: German Literary Theory and Cultural Studies Series
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Kenneth S. Calhoon is a professor of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Oregon and author of Fatherland: Novalis, Freud, and the Discipline of Romance (Wayne State University Press, 1992).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments7
Introduction9
1.Kracauer versus the Weimar Film-City21
2.Picture Postcard: Kracauer Writes from Berlin39
3.Provocations of the Disembodied Voice: Song and the Transition to Sound in Berger's Day and Night55
4.Man a Machine: The Shift from Soul to Identity in Lang's Metropolis and Ruttmann's Berlin73
5.Inventing Male Wombs: The Fairy-Tale Logic of Metropolis95
6.Formations of the Chamber: A Reading of Backstairs121
7.Horror vacui145
8.The Image as Abyss: The Mountain Film and the Cinematic Sublime171
Notes on Contributors191
Index193
Index of Films197
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