Non-Fiction Cinema in Postwar Europe
Visual Culture and the Reconstruction of Public Space
Contributor(s)
Cesalkova, Lucie (editor)
Praetorius-Rhein, Johannes (editor)
Val, Perrine (editor)
Villa, Paolo (editor)
Collection
European Research Council (ERC)Language
EnglishAbstract
After WWII, cinema was everywhere: in movie theatres, public squares, factories, schools, trial courts, trains, museums, and political meetings. Seen today, documentaries and newsreels, as well as the amateur production, show the kaleidoscopic portrait of a changing Europe. How did these cinematic images contribute to shaping the new societies emerging from the ashes of war, both in the Western and in the Eastern bloc? Why were they so crucial in framing and regulating new places and practices, political systems, economic dynamics, educational frameworks, and memory communities? This edited volume explores the multiple ways nonfiction cinema reconfigured public spaces, collective participation, democratisation, and governmentality between 1944 and 1956. Looking back at it through a transnational perspective and the critical category of spatiality, nonfiction cinema appears in a new light: simultaneously as a specifically situated and as a highly mobile medium, it was a fundamental agent in reshaping Europe’s shared identity and culture in a defining decade.
Keywords
Non-fiction cinema, reconstruction, post-war Europe, public space, transnational cinemaDOI
10.5117/9789463725583ISBN
9789048556625Publisher
Amsterdam University PressPublisher website
https://www.aup.nl/Publication date and place
Amsterdam, 2024Grantor
Series
Film Culture in Transition,Classification
Social and cultural history
European history