Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

In the first fifteen years of the twenty-first century, a large number of films were produced in Europe, Israel, the United States, and elsewhere addressing the historical reality and the legacy of the Holocaust. Contemporary Holocaust cinema exists at the intersection of national cultural traditions, aesthetic conventions, and the inner logic of popular forms of entertainment. It also reacts to developments in both fiction and documentary films following the innovations of a postmodern aesthetic. With the number of witnesses to the atrocities of Nazi Germany dwindling, medialized representations of the Holocaust take on greater cultural significance. At the same time, visual responses to the task of keeping memories alive have to readjust their value systems and reconsider their artistic choices.

Both established directors and a new generation of filmmakers have tackled the ethically difficult task of finding a visual language to represent the past that is also relatable to viewers. Both geographical and spatial principles of Holocaust memory are frequently addressed in original ways. Another development concentrates on perpetrator figures, adding questions related to guilt and memory. Covering such diverse topics, this volume brings together scholars from cultural studies, literary studies, and film studies. Their analyses of twenty-first-century Holocaust films venture across national and linguistic boundaries and make visible various formal and intertextual relationships within the substantial body of Holocaust cinema.

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Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

In the first fifteen years of the twenty-first century, a large number of films were produced in Europe, Israel, the United States, and elsewhere addressing the historical reality and the legacy of the Holocaust. Contemporary Holocaust cinema exists at the intersection of national cultural traditions, aesthetic conventions, and the inner logic of popular forms of entertainment. It also reacts to developments in both fiction and documentary films following the innovations of a postmodern aesthetic. With the number of witnesses to the atrocities of Nazi Germany dwindling, medialized representations of the Holocaust take on greater cultural significance. At the same time, visual responses to the task of keeping memories alive have to readjust their value systems and reconsider their artistic choices.

Both established directors and a new generation of filmmakers have tackled the ethically difficult task of finding a visual language to represent the past that is also relatable to viewers. Both geographical and spatial principles of Holocaust memory are frequently addressed in original ways. Another development concentrates on perpetrator figures, adding questions related to guilt and memory. Covering such diverse topics, this volume brings together scholars from cultural studies, literary studies, and film studies. Their analyses of twenty-first-century Holocaust films venture across national and linguistic boundaries and make visible various formal and intertextual relationships within the substantial body of Holocaust cinema.

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Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

Holocaust Cinema in the Twenty-First Century: Images, Memory, and the Ethics of Representation

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Overview

In the first fifteen years of the twenty-first century, a large number of films were produced in Europe, Israel, the United States, and elsewhere addressing the historical reality and the legacy of the Holocaust. Contemporary Holocaust cinema exists at the intersection of national cultural traditions, aesthetic conventions, and the inner logic of popular forms of entertainment. It also reacts to developments in both fiction and documentary films following the innovations of a postmodern aesthetic. With the number of witnesses to the atrocities of Nazi Germany dwindling, medialized representations of the Holocaust take on greater cultural significance. At the same time, visual responses to the task of keeping memories alive have to readjust their value systems and reconsider their artistic choices.

Both established directors and a new generation of filmmakers have tackled the ethically difficult task of finding a visual language to represent the past that is also relatable to viewers. Both geographical and spatial principles of Holocaust memory are frequently addressed in original ways. Another development concentrates on perpetrator figures, adding questions related to guilt and memory. Covering such diverse topics, this volume brings together scholars from cultural studies, literary studies, and film studies. Their analyses of twenty-first-century Holocaust films venture across national and linguistic boundaries and make visible various formal and intertextual relationships within the substantial body of Holocaust cinema.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231850919
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Oleksandr Kobrynskyy is a lecturer in the English department at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg. His current research focuses on representations of the Holocaust in Anglophone literatures and European cinema.

Gerd Bayer is Privatdozent in the English department at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg. He has written on a wide range of topics and is coeditor of Literatur und Holocaust.

Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors
Introduction: The Next Chapter in the History of Holocaust Cinema, by Oleksandr Kobrynskyy and Gerd Bayer
Part One: The Past and Its Presence
1. Transformations of Holocaust Memory: Frames of Transmission and Mediation, by Aleida Assmann
2. Supplementing Shoah: Claude Lanzmann's The Karski Report and The Last of the Unjust, by Sue Vice
3. The Act of Digging: Archaeology, Photography and Forensics in Birthplace and Holocaust by Bullets, by Brad Prager
4. The Willing Amnesia: The Holocaust in Post-Soviet Cinema, by Olga Gershenson
5. Wilhelm Brasse's Photographs from Auschwitz: Testimony and Photography in Irek Dobrowolski's The Portraitist, by Tomasz Łysak
Part Two: The Ethics of Memory
6. The Singular Jew: Representing National Socialism's Jewish Victims in Recent Historical Cinema, by Jennifer M. Kapczynski
7. Locked Doors and Hidden Graves: Searching the Past in Pokłosie, Sarah's Key and Ida, by Tobias Ebbrecht-Hartmann
8. The Ethics of Perspective and the Holocaust Archive: Spielberg's List, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas and Fateless, by Martin Modlinger
Part Three: The Legacy of Evil
9. 'The Doctor is Different': Ambivalent Ethics, Cinematic Heroics and the Figure of the Jewish Doctor in Tim Blake Nelson's The Grey Zone, by Erin McGlothlin
10. On the Cinematic Nazi, by Aaron Kerner
11. The Holocaust as Case Study: Universalist Rhetoric and National Memory in Stefan Ruzowitzky's Radical Evil, by Oleksandr Kobrynskyy
12. TV as a Historical Archive? How Epic Family Series Memorialise the Holocaust, by Marcus Stiglegger
Index

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