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Hollywood in Berlin - American Cinema and Weimar Germany (Hardcover, New)
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Hollywood in Berlin - American Cinema and Weimar Germany (Hardcover, New)
Series: Weimar & Now: German Cultural Criticism, 6
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Charlie Chaplin, Hollywood's most famous film star, went almost
unnoticed when he visited Berlin in 1921. Three years later, Jackie
Coogan was mobbed by Berlin fans. Within two years after that,
audiences were protesting with howls and angry whistling against
the American motion pictures that dominated Berlin's leading
theaters. Yet before the decade was over they were lining up to
hear Al Jolson sing in their first experience of sound film. These
roller-coaster reactions are engagingly documented by Thomas
Saunders as he explores an outstanding example of one of this
century's most important cultural developments: global
Americanization through the motion picture. The setting is Berlin,
the cultural heart of Central Europe and home of the only film
industry after World War I to rival Hollywood's. The invasion by
American films, which began in 1921 with overlapping waves of
sensationalist serials, slapstick shorts, society pictures, and
historical epics, initiated a decade of cultural collision and
accommodation. It fueled an impassioned debate about the properties
of cinema and the spectre of wholesale Americanization, while
facilitating unprecedented levels of cultural and economic
exchange. American motion pictures not only entertained all social
classes and film tastes in Weimar Germany but also served as a
vehicle for American values and a source of sharp economic
competition. In Hollywood in Berlin, Saunders examines the
significance of Hollywood's presence in Germany through an analysis
of the imported films and the commercial, social, and artistic
discourses which they generated. He explores the phases of audience
and critical appreciation of Hollywood - from avid curiosity
andenthusiasm through growing disenchantment and saturation - as
they relate to the ever-expanding front of the American film
invasion. His fascinating discussion of Erich von Stroheim's Greed,
which opened in Germany in 1926, shows how closely the violent
reaction to the film on the part of critics and moviegoers alike
paralleled the swelling fear of Amerikanismus and its perceived
challenge to traditional German values. By correlating Hollywood's
changing contribution to Weimar culture with the multiple contexts
in which the films and their values were received, Hollywood in
Berlin illuminates a vital moment of cultural encounter in the
twentieth century. In addition, it successfully restores to the
study of Weimar cinema its long-neglected international context and
historicizes the ongoing struggle to safeguard the specificity of
national cinemas from domination by Hollywood.
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