Conflict and Controversy in Small Cinemas
Series:
Edited By Janina Falkowska and Krzysztof Loska
This book examines small cinemas and their presentation of society in times of crisis and conflict from an interdisciplinary and intercultural point of view. The authors concentrate on economic, social and political challenges and point to new phenomena which have been exposed by film directors. They present essays on, among others, Basque cinema; gendered controversies in post-communist small cinemas in Slovakia and Czech Republic; ethnic stereotypes in the works of Polish filmmakers; stereotypical representation of women in Japanese avant-garde; post-communist political myths in Hungary; the separatist movements of Catalonia; people in diasporas and during migrations. In view of these timely topics, the book touches on the most serious social and political problems. The films discussed provide an excellent platform for enhancing debates on politics, gender, migration and new aesthetics in cinema at departments of history, sociology, literature and film.
Book (EPUB)
- Published in print:
- 19 Jun 2018
Bibliographic Information
- Publisher:
- Peter Lang D
- ISBN:
- 9783631755174
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Table of Contents
- Introduction (Janina Falkowska)
- Part 1: Politics in Small Cinemas
- 1. A call for freedom in the Spanish cinema (from a local perspective) (Iwona Kolasińska-Pasterczyk)
- 2. The troubled image: The conflict in Northern Ireland as seen by the Irish and the British (Karolina Kosińska)
- 3. Are they terrorists or victims? Basque cinema, violence and memory (Katixa Agirre)
- 4. A traditional stereotype for modern Spanish politics: The Basque pro-independence coalition Herri Batasuna and its depiction in cinema (Gorka Etxebarria / Josu Martinez)
- 5. New content and aesthetics in small cinemas: The case of the Basque-language films 80 egunean and Loreak (Iratxe Fresneda / Amaia Nerekan)
- 6. The image of living of local people in the film Timbuktu: Between the literal and the symbol (Paulina Cichoń)
- Part 2: Gender and Sexuality
- 7. Tourists, migrants and travellers: The role of women in reshaping Slovak (cinematic) identity (Jana Dudková)
- 8. Reality of corporeality: Female corporeality in recent Slovak social film dramas (Katarína Mišíková)
- 9. Before coming out: Queer representations in contemporary Polish cinema (Sebastian Jagielski)
- 10. To be or not to be yourself: Turkish diaspora and the foreign land – stereotypes, nation and (hetero)norms (Bartłomiej Nowak)
- Part 3: Stereotypes and Social Polarities
- 11. Exposed and concealed Roma conflict: Representation of contemporary Roma conflicts in Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary (Jadwiga Hučková)
- 12. Stereotypes and attempts at challenging them in Papusza (2013) by Krzysztof Krauze and Joanna Kos-Krauze (Iwona Grodź)
- Part 4: Theory and Small Cinemas
- 13. Migrants and exiles in the films by Katarzyna Klimkiewicz (Krzysztof Loska)
- 14. From controversy to contemplation: The thematic areas of the new Japanese avant-garde and experimental film in comparison to the “old masters” of Japanese avant-garde (Agnieszka Kiejziewicz)
- 15. Mockumentary cinema and its political might: Self-reflexivity and carnivalesque in the films of Michael Moore and Sacha Baron Cohen (Janina Falkowska)
- Part 5: Aesthetics of New Small Films
- 16. De-centered subversion: Hukkle and the challenging of revisionist historiography (Phil Mann)
- 17. “I don’t know”: Linking past and present, the personal and the nation, and movement in Sterlin Harjo’s This May be the Last Time (Chris LaLonde)
- 18. Post-industrial landscape in the “Silesian cinema”: Between the aesthetic and cultural experience (Ilona Copik)
- 19. Once upon a time there used to live a people… Neighborhooders and The Heritage as fairy tales about the Polish “excluded” (Marta Stańczyk)
Part 1: Politics in Small Cinemas
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- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Table of Contents
- Introduction (Janina Falkowska)
- Part 1: Politics in Small Cinemas
- 1. A call for freedom in the Spanish cinema (from a local perspective) (Iwona Kolasińska-Pasterczyk)
- 2. The troubled image: The conflict in Northern Ireland as seen by the Irish and the British (Karolina Kosińska)
- 3. Are they terrorists or victims? Basque cinema, violence and memory (Katixa Agirre)
- 4. A traditional stereotype for modern Spanish politics: The Basque pro-independence coalition Herri Batasuna and its depiction in cinema (Gorka Etxebarria / Josu Martinez)
- 5. New content and aesthetics in small cinemas: The case of the Basque-language films 80 egunean and Loreak (Iratxe Fresneda / Amaia Nerekan)
- 6. The image of living of local people in the film Timbuktu: Between the literal and the symbol (Paulina Cichoń)
- Part 2: Gender and Sexuality
- 7. Tourists, migrants and travellers: The role of women in reshaping Slovak (cinematic) identity (Jana Dudková)
- 8. Reality of corporeality: Female corporeality in recent Slovak social film dramas (Katarína Mišíková)
- 9. Before coming out: Queer representations in contemporary Polish cinema (Sebastian Jagielski)
- 10. To be or not to be yourself: Turkish diaspora and the foreign land – stereotypes, nation and (hetero)norms (Bartłomiej Nowak)
- Part 3: Stereotypes and Social Polarities
- 11. Exposed and concealed Roma conflict: Representation of contemporary Roma conflicts in Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary (Jadwiga Hučková)
- 12. Stereotypes and attempts at challenging them in Papusza (2013) by Krzysztof Krauze and Joanna Kos-Krauze (Iwona Grodź)
- Part 4: Theory and Small Cinemas
- 13. Migrants and exiles in the films by Katarzyna Klimkiewicz (Krzysztof Loska)
- 14. From controversy to contemplation: The thematic areas of the new Japanese avant-garde and experimental film in comparison to the “old masters” of Japanese avant-garde (Agnieszka Kiejziewicz)
- 15. Mockumentary cinema and its political might: Self-reflexivity and carnivalesque in the films of Michael Moore and Sacha Baron Cohen (Janina Falkowska)
- Part 5: Aesthetics of New Small Films
- 16. De-centered subversion: Hukkle and the challenging of revisionist historiography (Phil Mann)
- 17. “I don’t know”: Linking past and present, the personal and the nation, and movement in Sterlin Harjo’s This May be the Last Time (Chris LaLonde)
- 18. Post-industrial landscape in the “Silesian cinema”: Between the aesthetic and cultural experience (Ilona Copik)
- 19. Once upon a time there used to live a people… Neighborhooders and The Heritage as fairy tales about the Polish “excluded” (Marta Stańczyk)