|
|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
This includes a brilliant line-up of international contributors
that examine the implications of the portrayals of Nazis in
low-brow culture and that culture's re-emergence today.
"Nazisploitation!" examines past intersections of National
Socialism and popular cinema and the recent reemergence of this
imagery in contemporary visual culture. In the late 1960s and early
1970s, films such as "Love Camp 7" and "Ilsa, She-Wolf of the SS"
introduced and reinforced the image of Nazis as master paradigms of
evil in what film theorists deem the "sleaze" film. More recently,
Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds", as well as video games such as
"Call of Duty: World at War", have reinvented this iconography for
new audiences. In these works, the violent Nazi becomes the
hyperbolic caricature of the "monstrous feminine" or the masculine
sadist. Power-hungry scientists seek to clone the Fuhrer, and Nazi
zombies rise from the grave. The history, aesthetic strategies, and
political implications of such translations of National Socialism
into the realm of commercial, low brow, and "sleaze" visual culture
are the focus of this book. The contributors examine when and why
the Nazisploitation genre emerged as it did, how it establishes and
violates taboos, and why this iconography resonates with
contemporary audiences.
How the Holocaust is depicted and memorialized is key to our
understanding of the atrocity and its impact. Through 18 case
studies dating from the immediate aftermath of the genocide to the
present day, Holocaust Representations in History explores this in
detail. Daniel H. Magilow and Lisa Silverman examine film, drama,
literature, photography, visual art, television, graphic novels,
memorials, and video games as they discuss the major themes and
issues that underpin the chronicling of the Holocaust. Each chapter
is focused on a critical debate or question in Holocaust history;
the case studies range from well-known, commercially successful
works about the Holocaust to controversial examples which have
drawn accusations of profaning the memory of the genocide. This 2nd
edition adds to the mosaic of representation, with new chapters
analysing poetry in the wake of the Holocaust and video games from
the here and now. This unique volume provides an unmatched survey
of key and controversial Holocaust representations and is of vital
importance to anyone wanting to understand the subject and its
complexities.
How the Holocaust is depicted and memorialized is key to our
understanding of the atrocity and its impact. Through 18 case
studies dating from the immediate aftermath of the genocide to the
present day, Holocaust Representations in History explores this in
detail. Daniel H. Magilow and Lisa Silverman examine film, drama,
literature, photography, visual art, television, graphic novels,
memorials, and video games as they discuss the major themes and
issues that underpin the chronicling of the Holocaust. Each chapter
is focused on a critical debate or question in Holocaust history;
the case studies range from well-known, commercially successful
works about the Holocaust to controversial examples which have
drawn accusations of profaning the memory of the genocide. This 2nd
edition adds to the mosaic of representation, with new chapters
analysing poetry in the wake of the Holocaust and video games from
the here and now. This unique volume provides an unmatched survey
of key and controversial Holocaust representations and is of vital
importance to anyone wanting to understand the subject and its
complexities.
This annotated anthology presents the first English translation of
German photographer Albert Renger-Patzsch's collected writings. A
towering figure in the history of photography, Albert
Renger-Patzsch (1897-1966) has come to epitomize New Objectivity,
the neorealist movement in modernist literature, film, and the
visual arts recognized as the signature artistic style of Germany's
Weimar Republic. Today, his images are regularly exhibited and
widely considered key influences on contemporary photographers.
Whether they capture geometrically intricate cacti, flooded tidal
landscapes, stacks of raw materials, or imposing blast furnace
towers, Renger-Patzsch's photographs embody what his peer Hugo
Sieker termed "absolute realism," an approach predicated upon the
idea that photographers have one task: to exploit the camera's
unique capacity to document with uncompromising detail. Not only a
photographer, Renger-Patzsch was also an influential and lucid
writer who advocated his unique brand of uncompromising realism in
almost a half century's worth of articles, essays, lectures,
brochures, and unpublished manuscripts addressing photography,
technology, and modernity. Drawing on his papers at the Getty
Research Institute and other archives, The Absolute Realist unites
in one volume this skillful photographer's ideas about the defining
visual medium of modernity.
Collection of essays exploring the controversies surrounding images
of the Holocaust. Visual representations are an essential but
highly contested means of understanding and remembering the
Holocaust. Photographs taken in the camps in early 1945 provided
proof of and visceral access to the atrocities. Later
visualrepresentations such as films, paintings, and art
installations attempted to represent this extreme trauma. While
photographs from the camps and later aesthetic reconstructions
differ in origin, they share goals and have raised similar
concerns: the former are questioned not as to veracity but due to
their potential inadequacy in portraying the magnitude of events;
the latter are criticized on the grounds that the mediation they
entail is unacceptable. Some have even questioned any attempt to
represent the Holocaust as inappropriate and dangerous to
historical understanding. This book explores the taboos that
structure the production and reception of Holocaust images and the
possibilities that result from the transgression of those taboos.
Essays consider the uses of various visual media, aesthetic styles,
and genres in representations of the Holocaust; the uses of
perpetrator photography; the role of trauma in memory; aesthetic
problems of mimesis and memory in the work of Lanzmann, Celan, and
others; and questions about mass-cultural representations of the
Holocaust. David Bathrick is Emeritus Professor of German at
Cornell University, Brad Prager is Associate Professor of German at
the University of Missouri, and Michael D. Richardson is Associate
Professor of German at Ithaca College.
In this title, a brilliant line-up of international contributors
examine the implications of the portrayals of Nazis in low-brow
culture and that culture's re-emergence today. "Nazisploitation!"
examines past intersections of National Socialism and popular
cinema and the recent reemergence of this imagery in contemporary
visual culture. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, films such as
"Love Camp 7" and "Ilsa, She-Wolf of the SS" introduced and
reinforced the image of Nazis as master paradigms of evil in what
film theorists deem the "sleaze" film. More recently, Tarantino's
"Inglourious Basterds", as well as video games such as "Call of
Duty: World at War", have reinvented this iconography for new
audiences. In these works, the violent Nazi becomes the hyperbolic
caricature of the "monstrous feminine" or the masculine sadist.
Power-hungry scientists seek to clone the Fuhrer, and Nazi zombies
rise from the grave. The history, aesthetic strategies, and
political implications of such translations of National Socialism
into the realm of commercial, low brow, and "sleaze" visual culture
are the focus of this book. The contributors examine when and why
the Nazisploitation genre emerged as it did, how it establishes and
violates taboos, and why this iconography resonates with
contemporary audiences.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Dune: Part 1
Timothee Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, …
Blu-ray disc
(4)
R298
Discovery Miles 2 980
Midnights
Taylor Swift
CD
R505
Discovery Miles 5 050
|