Del 3 - Eastern European Screen Cultures
Early Cinema, Modernity and Visual Culture
The Imaginary of the Balkans
Inbunden, Engelska, 2021
Av Ana Grgic
2 379 kr
Finns i fler format (1)
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2021-12-07
- Mått156 x 234 x 15 mm
- Vikt396 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieEastern European Screen Cultures
- Antal sidor278
- FörlagAmsterdam University Press
- ISBN9789463728300
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Ana Grgic (PhD, University of St Andrews) is Associate Professor at Babes-Bolyai University. Her research on Balkan cinemas, archives, and cultural memory has appeared in Early Popular Visual Culture, Studies in Eastern European Cinema, Film Quarterly, and KinoKultura. She is co-editor of Contemporary Balkan Cinema: Transnational Exchanges and Global Circuits (2020), and is Associate Editor of Studies in World Cinema.
- Acknowledgements Foreword: Travelling Down /Travelling Through Preface: The Balkan Imaginary of Ruins Introduction: Charting the Terrain: Early Cinema in the Balkans 1. Visual Culture in the Balkans, Haptic Visuality, and Archival Moving Images My Journey through Savage Europe Hapticality of Archival Moving Images Hapticality of Visual Culture in the Balkans The Byzantine Cultural Legacy The Ottoman Cultural Legacy Architecture, Fresco Painting, Icons, Textiles, and Jewellery 'Image survivante' and the Legacy of Balkan Visual Culture The Difference in Perception 2. Historicizing the Balkan Spectator and the Embodied Cinema Experience Anticipating Cinema The Arrival of Cinema: Haptical Encounters with Moving Images The Spaces of Cinema and Coffee Consumption Cinema and 'Intensive Life' Cinema in the City Looking Back at Cinema 3. Mapping Constellations : Movement and Cross-cultural Exchange of Images, Practices, and People Journeys from the East: Cross-Cultural Travels of the Shadow-Puppet Theatre The Cinematograph at the Theatre Travelling Cinema Exhibitors and Filmmakers The Mysterious Hungarian and the Serbian-Bulgarian Connection The Balkan Cinema Pioneers and the Lost Gaze Cinema and the Global Imaginary 4. Imagining the Balkans: The Cinematic Gaze from the Outside Exoticism and the Balkans The Orientalist Gaze in the Marubi Studio Photographs 'Oriental' Austria: Cinematic Representations of Bosnia and Herzegovina Sensational Killings and Wild Insurgents at the Cinema The Charles Urban Trading Company in the Balkans Imperial Imagination, Archives, and Moving images The Reverberations of Balkan Wars and Siege of Shkodra 5. 'Made in the Balkans': Mirroring the Self The Desire for 'Our' Views High-life and the Pleasure of the Screen Scientific Spectacles Views of Ethnographic and Socio-Political Significance Pictures of Home Constructing the Nation through Cinema Historical Drama from Serbia Historical Epic from Romania Conclusion: The Future Perfect of Early Balkan Cinema Bibliography Appendix Index
Honourable Mention for the BASEES Women’s Forum Prizes 2022 "This impressive monograph makes a major contribution to the emerging field of early Balkan cinema history as well as to early cinema studies more broadly, providing a fascinating account of how moving images were both made and consumed in the Balkans." - BASEES Women’s Forum Prize Committee "An impressive, exhaustively researched work on Balkan early cinema grounded in regional and transnational layers of a culture history of visuality and geopolitics in modern times."- Zhen Zhang, New York University Tisch School Tisch School of the Arts "Grgic understands early cinema as a cultural “imaginary” more than a delimitable set of objects. This not only aligns her work with the more speculative and archaeological work in the field but also ends up bolstering her argument that cinema’s legacy in this region is to be sought in the systematic representation and persistence of certain dynamics of colonialism, othering, and self-representation." - Ezster Polonyi, Iluminace, Volume 34, 2022, No. 3 "This is a different story of modernity with tensions between memory and forgetting, the archive and its absent films, the Balkan gaze and the Oriental gaze. Grgi. enhances and offers alternatives to the prevailing notions and concepts of early cinema scholarship."- Nezih Erdogan, Istinye University "Early cinema, visual culture and modernity: The Imaginary of the Balkans is the first English-language synthetic volume in the still emerging field of early Balkan cinema history, an area marked by the extreme scarcity of multilingual sources. [...] Grgi.’s book is indeed an existential journey through the cinema history and memory of the Balkans. [...] On the road, crossing frontiers, bridging gaps and affronting the dramatic lacunas of fragmentary film and text collections while continuously translating the regional languages, the author takes the reader by the hand from an Archival center to another." - Mélisande Leventopoulos, Studies in Eastern European Cinema "Ana Grgic’s book is the first attempt to present early cinema in the Balkans in all its diversity and intricacy: not as the parallel existence of separate national protocinemas but as a unitary phenomenon. [...] The book consists of five chapters, each dealing with a major issue representative of early cinema itself and specific for its reception in the Balkans: the art of seeing, spectator’s experience, pioneers, external gaze, and identity. The sequence of these epistemological perspectives on the Balkan early cinema reproduces the path of its emancipation from visual tradition and external influences toward the assertion of modernity in the context of local culture." - Alexander Donev, Technology & Culture Journal "Following Ana Grgi.’s trajectory for the history of early Balkan cinema requires accepting her research premise that borders of all types must be effaced in order to best locate places, artists, or films. [...] For the book’s readers, the unexplored land becomes the multi-ethnic and multicultural Balkans that the author investigates with the goal of advocating for a culturally convergent academic approach to Balkan early cinema." - Delia Enyedi, Apparatus. Film, Media and Digital Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe "Ana Grgi.’s monograph provides a compelling exploration of how early cinema in the Balkans both shaped and reflected the region’s unique cultural and visual landscape, offering a fresh perspective on the intertwining of tradition and modernity."-Gergana Doncheva, Études Balkaniques, , issue 1, 2024