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Notes on the Contributors
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- List of Illustrations and Credits xiii
-
I. Expressionist Film — Weimar Cinema
- Activating the Differences: Expressionist Film and Early Weimar Cinema 1
- Weimar Cinema, Mobile Selves, and Anxious Males: Kracauer and Eisner Revisited 33
-
II. Revolution, Crime, and the Uncanny
- Revolution, Power, and Desire in Ernst Lubitsch’s Madame Dubarry 73
- “Bringing the Ghostly to Life”: Fritz Lang and His Early Dr. Mabuse Films 87
- Murnau — a Conservative Filmmaker? On Film History as Intellectual History 111
-
III. The Art of Expressionist Film
- The Double, the Décor, and the Framing Device: Once More on Robert Wiene’s The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 125
- Film as Graphic Art: On Karl Heinz Martin’s From Morn to Midnight 157
- Episodic Patchwork: The Bric-à-Brac Principle in Paul Leni’s Waxworks 173
-
IV. The Street, the Vaudeville, and the Power of the Camera
- Entrapment and Escape: Readings of the City in Karl Grune’s The Street and G. W. Pabst’s The Joyless Street 187
- Fragmenting the Space: On E. A. Dupont’s Varieté 211
- On Murnau’s Faust: A Generic Gesamtkunstwerk? 223
-
V. Avant-Garde Film
- “Painting in Time” and “Visual Music”: On German Avant-Garde Films of the 1920s 237
- Ruttmann, Rhythm, and “Reality”: A Response to Siegfried Kracauer’s Interpretation of Berlin. The Symphony of a Great City 251
- Filmography 271
- Bibliography 279
- Notes on the Contributors 289
- Index 293
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- List of Illustrations and Credits xiii
-
I. Expressionist Film — Weimar Cinema
- Activating the Differences: Expressionist Film and Early Weimar Cinema 1
- Weimar Cinema, Mobile Selves, and Anxious Males: Kracauer and Eisner Revisited 33
-
II. Revolution, Crime, and the Uncanny
- Revolution, Power, and Desire in Ernst Lubitsch’s Madame Dubarry 73
- “Bringing the Ghostly to Life”: Fritz Lang and His Early Dr. Mabuse Films 87
- Murnau — a Conservative Filmmaker? On Film History as Intellectual History 111
-
III. The Art of Expressionist Film
- The Double, the Décor, and the Framing Device: Once More on Robert Wiene’s The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 125
- Film as Graphic Art: On Karl Heinz Martin’s From Morn to Midnight 157
- Episodic Patchwork: The Bric-à-Brac Principle in Paul Leni’s Waxworks 173
-
IV. The Street, the Vaudeville, and the Power of the Camera
- Entrapment and Escape: Readings of the City in Karl Grune’s The Street and G. W. Pabst’s The Joyless Street 187
- Fragmenting the Space: On E. A. Dupont’s Varieté 211
- On Murnau’s Faust: A Generic Gesamtkunstwerk? 223
-
V. Avant-Garde Film
- “Painting in Time” and “Visual Music”: On German Avant-Garde Films of the 1920s 237
- Ruttmann, Rhythm, and “Reality”: A Response to Siegfried Kracauer’s Interpretation of Berlin. The Symphony of a Great City 251
- Filmography 271
- Bibliography 279
- Notes on the Contributors 289
- Index 293