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E-raamat: Screen Censorship Companion: Critical Explorations in the Control of Film and Screen Media

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Throughout the history of film, censorship has existed everywherein all shapes, colours, and dimensions. The act of restricting the free production, circulation, screening, and consumption of movies was never unique to authoritarian regimes. Censorship has had far-reaching implications for filmmakers, distributors, exhibitors, and audiences across generations and across genres, including the self-censorship of audiences disciplined into particular viewership positions. Today, soft and hard censorship coexist in ever-more fluid forms; the banning, regulating, trimming, and tailoring of films for harmless consumption all exemplify wider debates about access to media.





This companion brings together contemporary and historical views on censorship, covering Argentina, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The book considers Hollywoods practices and the United States legislative context as important frames of reference for the study of filmed entertainment censorship, be they concerned with obscene materials or plain mainstream movie fare. American cinema remains a wider compass, as evidenced by how studies in this companion, which deal with local and regional censorship, appear to have American movies as their targets.





This volume showcases the broad international scope of censorship through detailed examinations of censorship practices. The diversity of case studies is an indication of the global reach of censorshipnothing can escape its grasp. Ultimately, the censorship of screen access is a struggle for power and control; this book demonstrates how intense this struggle can become, and how compromises and solutions are found.
Cinema, Screen Media and Censorship: An Introduction Daniel Biltereyst
and Ernest Mathijs

DOI:10.47788/RSDL4520

1. Forestalling Controversy: The Production Code Administration and the
Mediation of Political Censorship Richard Maltby

DOI:10.47788/AJXR2557

2. A Philosovietic Mode of Film Censorship: A Supplement to Studies of Cold
War Italian Film Culture Karol Jówiak

DOI:10.47788/HHUW8463

3. Censorship of Foreign Films in Peoples Poland in the Late 1960s and Early
1970s: A Case Study of Films about Hippie Subculture Konrad Klejsa

DOI:10.47788/MWLP4097

4. Sex, Drugs, Violence and/or Nudity: Differences in Film Age Rating
Practices and Rationales in Denmark, France, Japan, Norway and the UK
Elisabeth Staksrud and Marita Eriksen Haugland

DOI:10.47788/FTMX2611

5. The Last Convulsions of Democracy: Wolfgang Petzets Pamphlet Verbotene
Filme and the Censorship Debate at the Close of the Weimar Republic Viola
Rühse

DOI:10.47788/ODXR8776

6. Party Apparatchiks as Filmmakers: The Film Approval Commissions in
Communist Poland, 19551970 Mikoaj Kunicki

DOI:10.47788/SNGT2135

7. Majors, Adults, Sex and Violence: Film Censorship under Military
Dictatorship in Chile, 19731989 Jorge Iturriaga Echeverría

DOI:10.47788/NOXF9829

8. Fighting for a Free Cinema in a Country That Is Not Free: Film Censorship
Abolitionism in Argentina (19781983) Fernando Ramírez Llorens

DOI:10.47788/XCJE5862

9. Censorship, Criticism and Notions of Quality in Post-War French Cinema
Daniel Morgan

DOI:10.47788/RFGD3515

10. Hopes and Fears of Transformation: FOCINE and Informal Practices of Film
Censorship in Colombia (19781993) Karina Aveyard and Karol Valderrama-Burgos


DOI:10.47788/BEZG4529

11. State Censorship of Debut Films in the 1980s Peoples Republic of Poland:
The Example of the Irzykowski Film Studio Emil Sowiski

DOI:10.47788/SVEO2240

12. Banned in Detroit: The Interconnectedness of Film, Literary and Media
Censorship Ben Strassfeld

DOI:10.47788/HBSC1824

13. Splicing Back against the Censors: How Archive/ Counter-Archive Saved the
Ontario Board of Censors Film Censorship Records from Destruction Michael
Marlatt

DOI:10.47788/XLVW2388

14. Italian Film Censorship (19481976): A Quantitative Analysis Mauro Giori
and Tomaso Subini

DOI:10.47788/HIIB3780

15. Historicizing the Censor: Path-Dependent Patterns of Film Censorship in
Turkey lke anler and Aydn Çam

DOI:10.47788/PRKT5596

16. Dont Be Afraid, Its Only Business: Rethinking the Video Nasties Moral
Panic in Thatchers Britain Mark McKenna

DOI:10.47788/GTGZ8668

17. The Ontario Film Review Board Meets the New French Extremity Daniel Sacco


DOI:10.47788/HJES6116

18. Invisible Censors, Opaque Laws and Surveilled Subjects Julian Petley

DOI:10.47788/EUHI2366

19. What Is a Hard Core? Obscenity, Pornography and Censorship Linda Williams


DOI:10.47788/TMRX1263
Daniel Biltereyst is Professor in Film and Media Studies at Ghent University, Belgium. He is the (co-)editor of several volumes on cinema audiences and censorship. In 2020 he published a monograph on the history of film/cinema censorship in Belgium, Verboden Beelden, and made a documentary with Bruno Mestdagh on film cuttings (Ongezien/invisible, 2020, Cinematek).





Ernest Mathijs is Professor of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. He has written on cult cinema, the reception of Canadian and European genre cinema, The Lord of the Rings, reality-TV, Thomas Pynchon, and on Delphine Seyrig. In 2020 he co-wrote the two-part documentary The Quiet Revolution.