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Although relatively small, the northern countries of Scandinavia
have made a disproportionately large contribution to world cinema.
Indeed, some of their films are among the best known of all times,
including The Seventh Seal, Dancer in the Dark, and The Girl with
the Dragon Tattoo. And Scandinavian directors are also among the
best known, just to mention Ingmar Bergman and Lars von Trier. But
there is much more to the cinema of Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
Finland and Iceland than that, and this book shows us what they
have been accomplishing over more than a century from the
beginnings of cinema until the present. The Historical Dictionary
of Scandinavian Cinema shows just how long and busy this history
has been in the chronology, starting in 1896. The introduction then
describes the situation in each one of the component countries, all
of which approached and developed the field in a similar but also
slightly different manner. The dictionary section, with over 400
substantial entries, looks at the situation in greater detail, with
over 400 substantial entries on major actors, directors and others,
significant films, various genres and themes, and subjects such as
animation, ethnicity, migration and censorship. Given its
contribution to world cinema it is good to finally have an
encyclopedia like this which can meet the interests of the scholar
and researcher but also the movie fan."
Lena Mattsson (*1966) is a distinguished Swedish artist. Her
practice includes photography, performance and social critique, as
well as film and video art. Her new book encompasses her whole
career, yet at the same time, it highlights her most recent works
and future perspectives: especially Mattsson’s works on legendary
Swedish publisher Bo Cavefors or her latest experiments with light
and projections. The selection of photographs, film stills, and
documentary material forms the basis for the profound discussion of
her work by Lars Gustaf Andersson, John Peter Nilsson, and
Charlotte Wiberg.
This book will be released as Open Access. Based on a research
project funded by the Swedish Research Council, this book examines
40 years of post-war independent immigrant filmmaking in Sweden.
John Sundholm and Lars Gustaf Andersson consider the creativity
that lies in the state of exile, offering analyses of over 50
rarely seen immigrant films that would otherwise remain invisible
and unarchived. They shed light on the complex web of personal,
economic, and cultural circumstances that surround migrant
filmmaking, discuss associations that became important sites of
self-organization for exiled filmmakers, and explore the cultural
practice of minor immigrant cinema archiving. The Cultural Practice
of Immigrant Filmmaking applies film theory to immigrant filmmaking
in a transnational context, exploring how immigrant filmmakers use
film to find a place in a new cultural situation.
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