Marco Abel is professor of English and film studies at the
University of Nebraska. He is the author of The Counter-Cinema of
the Berlin School and Violent Affect: Literature, Cinema, and
Critique After Representation, as well as the co-editor of Im
Angesicht des Fernsehens—Der Filmemacher Dominik Graf and the book
series Provocations.
Jaimey Fisher is professor of German and cinema and digital
media as well as the director of the Humanities Institute at the
University of California, Davis. He is the author of Disciplining
Germany: Youth, Reeducation, and Reconstruction after the Second
World War (Wayne State University Press, 2007) and, with Christian
Petzold, is co-editor of Spatial Turns: Space, Place, and Mobility
in German Literary and Visual Culture, among other volumes.
Bringing together some of the most influential scholars in German
film studies, this anthology provides an outstanding overview of
the numerous intersections between the work of the Berlin School
and broader currents in world cinema.""- Paul Cooke, Centenary
Chair in World Cinemas at the University of Leeds;
""Filmmakers of the Berlin School have made some of the most
powerful and challenging movies of the past decade. The essays in
this collection look closely at a number of important directors and
films. They also consider the Berlin School in historical and
international contexts, in relation to traditions of both art
cinema and genre filmmaking, and from a variety of theoretical
perspectives. This book is indispensable for anyone interested in
contemporary cinema.""- Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English
at Wayne State University;
""Uniformly well-written and incisive.""- Thomas Puhr, Film
International;
""In the context of German studies, this volume makes a
fundamentally innovative and thus exceptionally important
contribution to film studies. The edited volume’s distinctly global
approach advances the theoretical framing of contemporary cinematic
production by accounting for the transnational dynamics and global
flows. The scholarly discourse about global art cinema will
continue to theorize the interplay of national and global flows and
their relation to modes of production, politics of neoliberalism,
aesthetics of realism, and the re-emergence of auteurism. The
Berlin School and Its Global Contexts sets the stage and makes the
case for the sustained participation of German studies film
scholars in those ongoing debates.""- Barbara Mennel, Seminar
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