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E-raamat: Screening European Heritage: Creating and Consuming History on Film

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This book provides a unique examination of the way Europe’s past is represented on contemporary screens and what this says about contemporary cultural attitudes to history. How do historical dramas come to TV and cinema screens across Europe? How is this shaped by the policies and practices of cultural institutions, from media funding boards to tourist agencies and heritage sites? Who watches these productions and how are they consumed in cinemas, on TV and online , are just some of the questions this volume seeks to answer. From The Lives of Others to Game of Thrones, historical dramas are a particularly visible part of mainstream European film production, often generating major national debates on the role of the past in contemporary national identity construction.


Introduction xvii
Part I Contexts of Production
1(60)
1 The Politics and Sociology of Screening the Past: A National and Transnational Perspective
3(22)
Ib Bondebjerg
2 British Flanders: Co-produced Television Drama and the Limits of a European Heritage
25(20)
Jaap Verheul
3 Whose Heritage?: Not credevamo (We Believed) and the National, Regional and Transnational Dynamics of the Risorgimento Film
45(16)
Alex Marlow-Mann
Part II Limits of Representation
61(120)
4 Towards World Heritage Cinema (Starting from the Negative)
63(22)
Alan O'Leary
5 Rewriting History from the Margins: Diasporic Memory, Shabby Chic and Archival Footage
85(22)
Daniela Berghahn
6 Facing Dark Heritage: The Legacy of Nazi Perpetrators in German-Language Film
107(20)
Axel Bangert
7 Spectral Spanish Heritage: The Hauntology of La noche de los girasoles (The Night of the Sunflowers)
127(18)
Paul Mitchell
8 Adapting Balzac in Jacques Rivette's Ne Touchez pas la hache (Don't Touch the Axe): Violence and the Post-Heritage Aesthetic
145(18)
Andrew Watts
9 The Ironic Gaze: Roots Tourism and Irish Heritage Cinema
163(18)
Ruth Barton
Part III Modes of Consumption
181(98)
10 Historical Films in Europe: The Transnational Production, Circulation and Reception of `National' Heritage Drama
183(26)
Andrew Higson
11 From `English' Heritage to Transnational Audiences: Fan Perspectives and Practices and Why They Matter
209(26)
Claire Monk
12 From `Auschwitz-land' to Banglatown: Heritage Conflicts, Film and the Politics of Place
235(22)
Paul Cooge
13 Cinematic Pilgrimages: Postmodern Heritage Cinema
257(22)
Rob Stone
Index 279
Professor Paul Cooke is Centenary Chair of World Cinemas at the University of Leeds, UK. He has written on world cinemas engagement with Hollywood and on the legacy of both National Socialism and the GDR in contemporary German culture. He is currently developing a series of community filmmaking projects exploring the `dark heritage of Germany and South Africa. Professor Rob Stone is Chair of European Cinema and Professor of Film Studies at the University of Birmingham, UK. He is the author of several volumes on Spanish cinema, the political and cultural history of Basque cinema, flamenco and film, Surrealism and the cinema of Richard Linklater.