The Cinema Makers : Public Life and the Exhibition of Difference in South-Eastern and Central Europe since the 1960s by Anna Schober DJV, MOBI, DOC
9781841505152 English 1841505153 "The Cinema Makers" investigates how cinema spectators in southeastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema "events," writing about film, and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria, and the former Yugoslavia, Anna Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in cities such as Vienna, Cologne, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Ljubljana, Belgrade, Novi Sad, Subotica, Zagreb, and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political culture--and cinema's role in that development--in European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist, and post-socialist traditions., The Cinema Makers investigates how cinema spectators in south-eastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema 'events', writing about film and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria and the former Yugoslavia, Anna Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in cities such as Vienna, Cologne, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Ljubljana, Belgrade, Novi Sad, Subotica, Zagreb and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political cultureand cinema's role in that developmentin European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist and post-socialist traditions., This book investigates how, and why, cinema-goers in south-eastern and central European cities went from being spectators to cinema makers. It explores the practices, such as squatting in existing cinema spaces and organizing cinema 'events', that aided this transition. It draws on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists across Europe making them available to a wider public. It is a fascinating study conducted on the crossroads between film and media studies, and social and political science. The Cinema Makers investigates how cinema spectators in south-eastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as writing about film, squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema events, and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria, and the former Yugoslavia, Anne Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in Vienna, Cologne, Berlin, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Subotica, Ljubljana, Zagreb, and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political culture - and cinema's role in that development - in European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist, and post socialist traditions.
9781841505152 English 1841505153 "The Cinema Makers" investigates how cinema spectators in southeastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema "events," writing about film, and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria, and the former Yugoslavia, Anna Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in cities such as Vienna, Cologne, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Ljubljana, Belgrade, Novi Sad, Subotica, Zagreb, and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political culture--and cinema's role in that development--in European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist, and post-socialist traditions., The Cinema Makers investigates how cinema spectators in south-eastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema 'events', writing about film and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria and the former Yugoslavia, Anna Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in cities such as Vienna, Cologne, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Ljubljana, Belgrade, Novi Sad, Subotica, Zagreb and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political cultureand cinema's role in that developmentin European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist and post-socialist traditions., This book investigates how, and why, cinema-goers in south-eastern and central European cities went from being spectators to cinema makers. It explores the practices, such as squatting in existing cinema spaces and organizing cinema 'events', that aided this transition. It draws on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists across Europe making them available to a wider public. It is a fascinating study conducted on the crossroads between film and media studies, and social and political science. The Cinema Makers investigates how cinema spectators in south-eastern and central European cities became cinema makers through such practices as writing about film, squatting in existing cinema spaces, organizing cinema events, and making films themselves. Drawing on a corpus of interviews with cinema activists in Germany, Austria, and the former Yugoslavia, Anne Schober compares the activities and artistic productions they staged in Vienna, Cologne, Berlin, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Subotica, Ljubljana, Zagreb, and Sarajevo. The resulting study illuminates the differences and similarities in the development of political culture - and cinema's role in that development - in European countries with pluralist-democratic, one-party socialist, and post socialist traditions.