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Hitchcock, the Holocaust, and the Long Take: Memory of the Camps
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Steven Jacobs
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
6. April 2011
In 1945, Alfred Hitchcock got involved in the production of a documentary film, which later would be called Memory of the Camps. Although Hitchcock's involvement in the project was rather minimal, his contribution interfered in an interesting way with some of the aesthetic preoccupations that particularly characterized his feature films of the 1940s. How are some of these interests, such as the fascination for morbid details, the use of fetish objects and a preference for long takes, connected to the issues of memory, trauma, and (historical) truth?
Published Online: 2011-04-06
Published in Print: 2011-April
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Introduction. Performing Cultural Trauma in Theatre and Film. Between Representation and Experience
- Hitchcock, the Holocaust, and the Long Take: Memory of the Camps
- Playing Soldiers at the Edge of Imagination. Hotel Modern and the Representation of the Unrepresentable
- On the Charge of Memory. Auschwitz, Trauma and Representation
- Mediating Memories. The Ethics of Post-9/11 Spectatorship
- The Violin Player, the Soccer Game and the Wall-Graffiti. Rhetorical Strategies in the Border-Regions between Israel and Palestine
- Mourning as Method. William Kentridge's Black Box/Chambre Noir
- “‘It's about us!’. Violence and Narrative Memory in Post 9/11 American Theatre
- Beyond Medusa. Recovering History on Stage
- Unclaimed and Unclaimable. Memories of the RAF
- Afterimages. Post-Holocaust, Posttraumatic, and Postcolonial Cinemas
- Das Warten auf den Herrensignifikanten oder: Die Verhandlung von Zufall, Zeichen und Notwendigkeit in Thomas Pynchons The Crying of Lot 49 als Kritik des Indizienparadigmas
- Von der “(Un)Möglichkeit, sich in die Fremde hineinzuleben”. Kulturelle Assimilation als Desintegration am Beispiel von Ilija Trojanows Roman Der Weltensammler
- Rezensionen
- Liste der Mitarbeiter
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Introduction. Performing Cultural Trauma in Theatre and Film. Between Representation and Experience
- Hitchcock, the Holocaust, and the Long Take: Memory of the Camps
- Playing Soldiers at the Edge of Imagination. Hotel Modern and the Representation of the Unrepresentable
- On the Charge of Memory. Auschwitz, Trauma and Representation
- Mediating Memories. The Ethics of Post-9/11 Spectatorship
- The Violin Player, the Soccer Game and the Wall-Graffiti. Rhetorical Strategies in the Border-Regions between Israel and Palestine
- Mourning as Method. William Kentridge's Black Box/Chambre Noir
- “‘It's about us!’. Violence and Narrative Memory in Post 9/11 American Theatre
- Beyond Medusa. Recovering History on Stage
- Unclaimed and Unclaimable. Memories of the RAF
- Afterimages. Post-Holocaust, Posttraumatic, and Postcolonial Cinemas
- Das Warten auf den Herrensignifikanten oder: Die Verhandlung von Zufall, Zeichen und Notwendigkeit in Thomas Pynchons The Crying of Lot 49 als Kritik des Indizienparadigmas
- Von der “(Un)Möglichkeit, sich in die Fremde hineinzuleben”. Kulturelle Assimilation als Desintegration am Beispiel von Ilija Trojanows Roman Der Weltensammler
- Rezensionen
- Liste der Mitarbeiter