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Recollecting Lotte Eisner provides the first in-depth examination
of the remarkable transnational career of film journalist,
archivist, and historian Lotte Eisner (1896-1983). From her early
years as a film critic in interwar Berlin to her escape from prison
in occupied France and from her role as chief curator at the
Cinematheque francaise to that as the mythic "collective
conscience" of New German Cinema, Eisner was a prolific writer and
lecturer and a pivotal voice in early film and media studies.
Situated at the juncture of feminist media historiography and
disciplinary intellectual history, this groundbreaking book is
based on extensive multilingual archival research and the
excavation of a rich corpus of previously overlooked materials.
Introducing samples of Eisner's writing in translation, this volume
makes some of the most important contributions of a foundational
scholar in the field of film studies accessible for the first time
to an English-language readership.
Recollecting Lotte Eisner provides the first in-depth examination
of the remarkable transnational career of film journalist,
archivist, and historian Lotte Eisner (1896-1983). From her early
years as a film critic in interwar Berlin to her escape from prison
in occupied France and from her role as chief curator at the
Cinematheque francaise to that as the mythic "collective
conscience" of New German Cinema, Eisner was a prolific writer and
lecturer and a pivotal voice in early film and media studies.
Situated at the juncture of feminist media historiography and
disciplinary intellectual history, this groundbreaking book is
based on extensive multilingual archival research and the
excavation of a rich corpus of previously overlooked materials.
Introducing samples of Eisner's writing in translation, this volume
makes some of the most important contributions of a foundational
scholar in the field of film studies accessible for the first time
to an English-language readership.
Uncanny Histories in Film and Media brings together a stellar
lineup of established and emergent scholars who explore the uncanny
twists and turns that are often occluded in larger accounts of film
and media. Prompted by fresh archival research and new conceptual
approaches, the works included here probe the uncanny as a mode of
historical analysis that reveals surprising connections and
unsettling continuities. The uncanny stands for what often
eludes us, for what remains unfamiliar or mysterious or
strange. Whether writing about film movements, individual
works, or the legacies of major or forgotten critics and theorists,
the contributors remind us that at the heart of the uncanny, and
indeed the writing of history, is a troubling of definitions, a
challenge to our inherited narratives, and a disturbance of what
was once familiar in the uncanny histories of our field. Â
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