The Cosmopolitan Screen (Between the Local and the Global: Revisiting Sites of Postwar German Cinema)

German Cinema and the Global Imaginary, 1945 to the Present

Explores German cinema's enthusiasm for and anxiety about the blurring of postwar cultural boundaries

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Copyright © 2007, University of Michigan. All rights reserved.

Description

The Cosmopolitan Screen investigates the extent to which German filmmakers throughout the last sixty years have engaged with the ever more fluid trade of images, meanings, and identities in a globalizing world. The volume traces German cinema’s negotiation of the global as a multilayered story in which the hopes and the fears about the prospect of a more cosmopolitan culture often go hand in hand. Featuring original work from some of the foremost scholars in German film studies from either side of the Atlantic, The Cosmopolitan Screen makes a persuasive case for rethinking the place of the “national” within an increasingly cosmopolitan and global economy of images and sounds.

 

 

"Offering fresh paradigms, perspectives and cross-connections, this volume pushes German film scholarship far beyond its old national framework."
—Katie Trumpener, Professor of Comparative Literature, English and Film Studies, Yale University

 

"Each of the essays, like the volume as a whole, offers new insights into the circulation of German images, sounds, stories, and texts, precisely by considering them beyond the narrow confines of a ‘uniquely German’ national identity. Schindler and Koepnick have envisioned a new future for both German Studies and Film Studies by locating postwar German cinema within global networks of production, reception, and technological innovation and change."
—Patrice Petro, Professor of English and Film Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

 

"Schindler and Koepnick's formulation of the ‘cosmopolitan gaze’ as a vehicle for the constitution of a postnational German film studies is both cogent and charged with fruitful possibilities for future work in the field. The admirable mix of lucidity and critical sophistication which this array of scholars bring to their subject will make The Cosmopolitan Screen essential reading for students, scholars, and researchers."
—Erica Carter, Professor and Chair of German Studies, University of Warwick

 

Lutz Koepnick is Professor of German, Film and Media Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. Stephan K. Schindler is Professor of German, Comparative Literature and Film Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

Lutz Koepnick is Professor of German, Film and Media Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

Stephan K. Schindler is Professor of German, Comparative Literature and Film Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

"The Cosmopolitan Screen advances a forward-looking and theoretically sophisticated argument about national cinema within a global context, and it accomplishes this by focusing on German cinema within post-national and transnational contexts, questions, and forms. Schindler and Koepnick draw our attention to the ways in which German cinema today moves beyond the conceptual paradigm of the "nation" to rethink the place of the "national" within an increasingly cosmopolitan and global economy of images and sounds. Each of the essays, like the volume as a whole, offer new insights into the circulation of German images, sounds, stories, and texts, precisely by considering them beyond the narrow confines of a "uniquely German" national identity. Schindler and Koepnick have envisioned a new future for both German Studies and Film Studies by locating postwar German cinema within global networks of production, reception, and technological innovation and change."
—Patrice Petro, Professor of English and Film Studies, The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

- Patrice Petro

"Schindler and Koepnick's formulation of the "cosmopolitan gaze" as a vehicle for the constitution of a post-national German film studies is both cogent and charged with fruitful possibilities for future work in the field. The admirable mix of lucidity and critical sophistication which this array of scholars bring to their subject will make The Cosmopolitan Screen essential reading for students, scholars, and researchers."
—Erica Carter, Professor and Chair of German Studies, University of Warwick

- Erica Carter

"Offering fresh paradigms, perspectives and cross-connections, this volume pushes German film scholarship far beyond its old national framework."
—Katie Trumpener, Professor of Germanic Studies, Comparative Literature, English and American Literature, and Cinema and Media Studies, University of Chicago

- Katie Trumpener

"This outstanding compilation of 15 articles invites German/film studies scholars to depart from research practices no longer commensurate with developments in recent post-Wall German cinema."
—Margit Sinka, German Studies Review

- Margit Sinka, Clemson University