"Loshitzky (Univ. of East London, UK) here expands on her earlier fine work on cinema and politics: The Radical Faces of Godard and Bertolucci (CH, Sep'95, 33-0195) and Identity Politics on the Israeli Screen (CH, Jul'02, 39-6318). She works through contemporary European films that foreground migration, with the goal of describing each film's view of 'fortress Europe.' Loshitzky returns to Bernardo Bertolucci in Besieged (1998), while picking out Godardian elements in both Mathieu Kassovitz's La Haine (1995) and Michael Winterbottom's 'Camp Trilogy' (In This World, Code 46, The Road to Guantanamo). She also discusses the Swiss film Journey of Hope (1990) and Stephen Frears's Dirty Pretty Things (2002). The range of films Loshitzky takes on is wide, but she makes no claim for comprehensiveness. She notes that she selects 'hegemonic' rather than 'minority discourse' films, i.e., films made by 'hosts' rather than 'strangers.' Given that principle of selection, this reviewer could have done with more unmasking of hegemonic ideology and less letting the films speak—however critically—for themselves. That said, this book is every bit as rewarding as the best recent work on European identity and the cinema, e.g., Rosalind Galt's The New European Cinema: Redrawing the Map (CH, Nov'06, 44-1429). Summing Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty and researchers. — Choice"—S. C. Dillon, Bates College, September 2010"This book is every bit as rewarding as the best recent work on European identity and the cinema . . . Essential.September 2010, vol. 48 No. 1"—Choice"Mapped and argued with equal expertise, Yosefa Loshitzky's . . . monograph is a valuable contribution to the literature on diaspora and migration in contemporary cinema."—www.intellectbooks.co.uk"[T]his is a valuable book for those interested in the study of migration and film. Vol. 24, No. 1"—Journal of Refugee Studies"[T]his is a stimulating and informative survey that raises many questions about the political attitudes that underpin the broad European consensus on questions of immigration.2011"—Journal of European Studies"[This is] a particularly relevant and even prescient publication, a most welcome addition to the growing number of books centred around the ever-perplexing premise of unravelling societal and by extension cinematic identity. 8/8/2011"—alphavillejournal.com"Written in a clear, concise, and engaging style, [this book] will appeal to both students and scholars of world cinema."—Frank Tomasulo, Florida State University"Loshitzky makes the crucial link between the political screening of new immigrants by European governments and societies with the cinematic screening of these immigrants by European directors, all the while offering sensitive and thick readings of the films."—Hamid Naficy, author of An Accented Cinema: Exilic and Diasporic Filmmaking