Description

Book Synopsis

Focuses on cinema in Eastern Europe in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc



Trade Review
"[A]n excellent collection of essays dealing with contemporary films of the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, the former East Germany, Romania, Ukraine, and Yugoslavia. Most of the films discussed are relatively unknown in the West, which is what makes the book so important; the book is also an excellent one-stop source for courses on recent eastern European cinema... [T]his book would be of immeasurable value to anyone working in the areas of eastern European cinema, the globalization of the international cinema marketplace, and the problems and promises arising from the privatization of national cinemas. Summing Up: Highly recommended."--Choice, August 2013 "This collection provides a much-needed comparative overview of recent developments in national cinemas in Central and Eastern Europe... [The] volume, which features some of the most notable scholars working on the cinemas of the region, strikes an effective balance between analyzing recent trends within the respective film industries and discussing film-makers and films. It usefully highlights important film-makers who may have otherwise slipped below the radar of the international film scene...[A]n excellent volume. It will prove an indispensable reference for anyone studying the cinemas of the region."--Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television "This collection provides a much-needed comparative overview of recent developments in national cinemas in Central and Eastern Europe... [The] volume, which features some of the most notable scholars working on the cinemas of the region, strikes an effective balance between analyzing recent trends within the respective film industries and discussing film-makers and films. It usefully highlights important film-makers who may have otherwise slipped below the radar of the international film scene...[A]n excellent volume. It will prove an indispensable reference for anyone studying the cinemas of the region." - Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television

Table of Contents
Catherine Portuges and Peter Hames, 'Introduction: Cinemas in Transition: East-Central Europe after 1989'; Dina Iordanova, 'Bulgarian Cinema: Optimism in Moderation'; Peter Hames, 'The Czech and Slovak Republics: The Velvet Revolution and After'; Barton Byg, 'Is There Still an East German Cinema?; Catherine Portuges, 'Memory and Re-invention in Post-socialist Hungarian Cinema'; Ewa Mazierska, 'Searching for Survival and Meaning: Polish Film Industry and Art after 1989'; Bogdan Stefanescu and Alexandra Foamente, 'Narratives of the Emerging Self Romania's First Years of Post-Totalitarian Cinema'; Bohdan Y. Nebesio, 'The First Five Years with no Plan: Building National Cinema in Ukraine, 1992-1997'; Andrew Horton, 'Cinema Haunts My Memory: Filmmaking in the Former Yugoslavia'

Cinemas in Transition in Central and Eastern

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    A Hardback by Catherine Portuges, Peter Hames

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      Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 11/01/2013
      ISBN13: 9781592132652, 978-1592132652
      ISBN10: 1592132650

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Focuses on cinema in Eastern Europe in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc



      Trade Review
      "[A]n excellent collection of essays dealing with contemporary films of the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, the former East Germany, Romania, Ukraine, and Yugoslavia. Most of the films discussed are relatively unknown in the West, which is what makes the book so important; the book is also an excellent one-stop source for courses on recent eastern European cinema... [T]his book would be of immeasurable value to anyone working in the areas of eastern European cinema, the globalization of the international cinema marketplace, and the problems and promises arising from the privatization of national cinemas. Summing Up: Highly recommended."--Choice, August 2013 "This collection provides a much-needed comparative overview of recent developments in national cinemas in Central and Eastern Europe... [The] volume, which features some of the most notable scholars working on the cinemas of the region, strikes an effective balance between analyzing recent trends within the respective film industries and discussing film-makers and films. It usefully highlights important film-makers who may have otherwise slipped below the radar of the international film scene...[A]n excellent volume. It will prove an indispensable reference for anyone studying the cinemas of the region."--Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television "This collection provides a much-needed comparative overview of recent developments in national cinemas in Central and Eastern Europe... [The] volume, which features some of the most notable scholars working on the cinemas of the region, strikes an effective balance between analyzing recent trends within the respective film industries and discussing film-makers and films. It usefully highlights important film-makers who may have otherwise slipped below the radar of the international film scene...[A]n excellent volume. It will prove an indispensable reference for anyone studying the cinemas of the region." - Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television

      Table of Contents
      Catherine Portuges and Peter Hames, 'Introduction: Cinemas in Transition: East-Central Europe after 1989'; Dina Iordanova, 'Bulgarian Cinema: Optimism in Moderation'; Peter Hames, 'The Czech and Slovak Republics: The Velvet Revolution and After'; Barton Byg, 'Is There Still an East German Cinema?; Catherine Portuges, 'Memory and Re-invention in Post-socialist Hungarian Cinema'; Ewa Mazierska, 'Searching for Survival and Meaning: Polish Film Industry and Art after 1989'; Bogdan Stefanescu and Alexandra Foamente, 'Narratives of the Emerging Self Romania's First Years of Post-Totalitarian Cinema'; Bohdan Y. Nebesio, 'The First Five Years with no Plan: Building National Cinema in Ukraine, 1992-1997'; Andrew Horton, 'Cinema Haunts My Memory: Filmmaking in the Former Yugoslavia'

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