Revisioning History

Revisioning History

Revisioning History

more information about Revisioning History

Editorial Reviews
Review
This excellent book of 13 articles explores how films construct an image of the past. . . . Revisioning History asks: what are the particular set of rules by which the past in represented on moving images? How does the present influence the representation of the past in films? Dealing with such topics as colonialism and Nazism, the films were made in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America.

Book Description

In Revisioning History thirteen historians from around the world look at the historical film on its own terms, not as it compares to written history but as a unique way of recounting the past. How does film construct a historical world? What are the rules, codes, and strategies by which it brings the past to life? What does that historical construction mean to us? In grappling with these questions, each contributor looks at an example of New History cinema. Different from Hollywood costume dramas or documentary films, these films are serious efforts to come to grips with the past; they have often grown out of nations engaged in an intense quest for historical connections, such as India, Cuba, Japan, and Germany.

The volume begins with an introduction by Robert Rosenstone. Part I, "Contesting History," comprises essays by Geoff Eley (on the film Distant Voices, Still Lives), Nicholas B. Dirks (The Home and the World), Thomas Kierstead and Deidre Lynch (Eijanaika), and Pierre Sorlin (Night of the Shooting Stars). Contributing to Part II, "Visioning History," are Michael S. Roth (Hiroshima Mon Amour), John Mraz (Memories of Underdevelopment), Min Soo Kang (The Moderns) and Clayton R. Koppes (Radio Bikini). Part III, "Revisioning History" contains essays by Denise J. Youngblood (Repentance), Rudy Koshar (Hitler: A Film from Germany), Rosenstone (Walker), Sumiko Higashi (Walker and Mississippi Burning), and Daniel Sipe (From the Pole to the Equator).

Revisioning History,Robert A. Rosenstone,Princeton University Press,0691025347,Cinema/Film: Book,Film & Video - History & Criticism,Motion pictures and history,Performing Arts,Pop Arts / Pop Culture,American History,European History,Film Studies,Performing Arts / Film / History & Criticism

Fun Book:

  1. Robert Altman's Subliminal Reality
  2. Seeing Hardy: Film and Television Adaptations of the Fiction of Thomas Hardy
  3. Solo Pieces for the Advanced Violinist
  4. Southern Mountaineers in Silent Films: Plot Synopses of Movies About Moonshining, Feuding and Other Mountain Topics, 1904-1929
  5. Special Effects
  6. Special Effects in the Movies (Lucent Overview Series)
  7. Spirituality As Ideology In Black Women's Film And Literature
  8. Technical Film and TV for Nontechnical People
  9. The American Book of the Dead
  10. The American Horror Film

Fun Book

Fun Book

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