Description

Book Synopsis
Katharina Bonzel unravels the delicate matrix of national identity, sports, and emotion through the lens of popular sports films in comparative national contexts.




Trade Review
“Bonzel’s book joins Bruce Babington’s The Sports Film: Games People Play (2014) as an important book-length critical treatment of this film genre.”—S. C. Dillon, Choice
“Katharina Bonzel eloquently explores the complex intersections that exist between national identity and class, ethnicity, and gender in sports films. Her historically nuanced readings trace the complex ways in which sports films have sought to generate a sense of emotional authenticity that promotes audience engagement with their visions of the nation. . . . [This is] a valuable intervention both in film theory and in ongoing debates about national identity.”—Nicholas Chare, author of Sportswomen in Cinema
“Analyzing more than a dozen well-known films from the U.S., UK, and—importantly and unusually—Germany, Bonzel demonstrates how and why our sense of belonging to (or marginalization within) a nation morphs over time. This book is for anyone interested in national myths, dreams, anxieties, and nightmares, as conveyed through sports films. A welcome study of a burgeoning and influential film genre!”—Chris Holmlund, professor emerita of cinema studies, women/gender/sexuality studies, and French at the University of Tennessee

“Sports and cinema are two of the most popular and significant cultural institutions in the contemporary world. Despite arguments to the contrary, the nation remains perhaps the world’s most potent sociopolitical construct. This book is without doubt a contribution not only to one field but to several.”—Alan Bairner, professor of sport and social theory at Loughborough University’s School of Sport, Exercise, and Health Sciences
"Sports fans, movie fans and readers who are interested in social and political issues will all find something of interest in this book."—Lance Smith, Guy Who Reviews Sports Books

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. “Let Us Praise Famous Men”: Creating Myth and Memory in Chariots of Fire
2. Unifying Germany: The Miracle of Bern and National Identity
3. Anxious in America: Rocky Balboa and the American Dream
4. Small Towns, Big Dreams: American Pastoral, Race, and the Sports Film
5. Gendering the Nation: The “Hero Other” in Sports Films
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

National Pastimes

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    A Hardback by Katharina Bonzel

    2 in stock

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      Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2020
      ISBN13: 9781496215529, 978-1496215529
      ISBN10: 1496215524

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Katharina Bonzel unravels the delicate matrix of national identity, sports, and emotion through the lens of popular sports films in comparative national contexts.




      Trade Review
      “Bonzel’s book joins Bruce Babington’s The Sports Film: Games People Play (2014) as an important book-length critical treatment of this film genre.”—S. C. Dillon, Choice
      “Katharina Bonzel eloquently explores the complex intersections that exist between national identity and class, ethnicity, and gender in sports films. Her historically nuanced readings trace the complex ways in which sports films have sought to generate a sense of emotional authenticity that promotes audience engagement with their visions of the nation. . . . [This is] a valuable intervention both in film theory and in ongoing debates about national identity.”—Nicholas Chare, author of Sportswomen in Cinema
      “Analyzing more than a dozen well-known films from the U.S., UK, and—importantly and unusually—Germany, Bonzel demonstrates how and why our sense of belonging to (or marginalization within) a nation morphs over time. This book is for anyone interested in national myths, dreams, anxieties, and nightmares, as conveyed through sports films. A welcome study of a burgeoning and influential film genre!”—Chris Holmlund, professor emerita of cinema studies, women/gender/sexuality studies, and French at the University of Tennessee

      “Sports and cinema are two of the most popular and significant cultural institutions in the contemporary world. Despite arguments to the contrary, the nation remains perhaps the world’s most potent sociopolitical construct. This book is without doubt a contribution not only to one field but to several.”—Alan Bairner, professor of sport and social theory at Loughborough University’s School of Sport, Exercise, and Health Sciences
      "Sports fans, movie fans and readers who are interested in social and political issues will all find something of interest in this book."—Lance Smith, Guy Who Reviews Sports Books

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      1. “Let Us Praise Famous Men”: Creating Myth and Memory in Chariots of Fire
      2. Unifying Germany: The Miracle of Bern and National Identity
      3. Anxious in America: Rocky Balboa and the American Dream
      4. Small Towns, Big Dreams: American Pastoral, Race, and the Sports Film
      5. Gendering the Nation: The “Hero Other” in Sports Films
      Conclusion
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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