Chapter
Publicly Available
Acknowledgments
-
Michael Wedel
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments V
- Contents VII
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Pictorial affects
- 1. Cinematic Titanic: Early German cinema and the modern media event 17
- 2. Ciphers of loss: Max Mack’s (in)visible authorship 47
- 3. Frames of desire: Franz Hofer, melodrama and narrative space 66
- 4. Phantasmatic intimacy: The tears of Asta Nielsen 78
- 5. Metaphors and atmospheres: Murnau, fantasy and the Kammerspielfilm 90
-
Part 2: Synchronizing the senses
- 6. Sculpting with light: Stereoscopic vision and the idea of Film as a “Plastic Art in Motion” 111
- 7. Permanent Transition: Techniques and technologies of the early German music film 136
- 8. Ruptures in the nation’s “experiential economy”: Universal in Germany and ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT 160
- 9. Epilogue: Fritz Lang, double vision and the place of rupture 180
- Bibliography 192
- Filmography 206
- Subject Index 210
- Name Index 213
- Film Index 216
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments V
- Contents VII
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Pictorial affects
- 1. Cinematic Titanic: Early German cinema and the modern media event 17
- 2. Ciphers of loss: Max Mack’s (in)visible authorship 47
- 3. Frames of desire: Franz Hofer, melodrama and narrative space 66
- 4. Phantasmatic intimacy: The tears of Asta Nielsen 78
- 5. Metaphors and atmospheres: Murnau, fantasy and the Kammerspielfilm 90
-
Part 2: Synchronizing the senses
- 6. Sculpting with light: Stereoscopic vision and the idea of Film as a “Plastic Art in Motion” 111
- 7. Permanent Transition: Techniques and technologies of the early German music film 136
- 8. Ruptures in the nation’s “experiential economy”: Universal in Germany and ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT 160
- 9. Epilogue: Fritz Lang, double vision and the place of rupture 180
- Bibliography 192
- Filmography 206
- Subject Index 210
- Name Index 213
- Film Index 216