Description

Book Synopsis
Explores Haneke's historically complex film as a reflection on purity, ideology, violence, and child-rearing. White ribbons and black pedagogy - Michael Haneke's award-winning film The White Ribbon (2009) is a multilayered reflection on purity, ideology, violence, and child rearing. In this tense black-and-white whodunit, mysterious events occur in a small town on the German-Polish border in 1913-14. A tripwire fells the doctor's horse; a farmhand's wife falls through the floor of a shed; a barn goes up in flames; the baron's son is terribly beaten; a girls takes claims to clairvoyance; a mentally disabled boy is tortured and maimed. While the film unfolds on the eve of the First World War, the violence evokes other historical moments: the breakup of the multi ethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire, the rise of National Socialism, the emergence of 1960s German terrorism, and religious fundamentalism post 9/11. Fatima Naqvi's book looks at Haneke's technique of combining various histories in the digital era. It also reflects on the guise of literariness and historical authenticity in which the director clothes this fictional film. It meditates on the film's inscription techniques and its ability to appeal to international audiences. Naqvi shows that The White Ribbon bespeaks a certain historical "translatability" into historical and aesthetic contexts outside of Germany-in marked contrast to the historical specificity it conveys on a surface level.

Trade Review
Naqvi hopes to counter the impression some critics were left with: that . . . the film . . . argues that no one is responsible for Nazi violence. She argues convincingly that Haneke's specific indictment of Enlightenment conceptions of pedagogy and their nineteenth-century practices do in fact point to a culprit. [Those practices] "made German systems of hypocrisy, collusion, and oppression possible across generations" (78), and Haneke's specific aesthetic paradigms and film techniques make that argument clear. -- Noah Soltau * GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW *

Table of Contents
Introduction Literariness Inscriptions Black Pedagogy Working Through Working Through Women's Meta-Commentary Germanness An Ecology of Images The Unresolved Mystery Coda Credits Notes

The White Ribbon

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    A Paperback / softback by Dr. Fatima Naqvi

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      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 15/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781640140448, 978-1640140448
      ISBN10: 1640140441

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores Haneke's historically complex film as a reflection on purity, ideology, violence, and child-rearing. White ribbons and black pedagogy - Michael Haneke's award-winning film The White Ribbon (2009) is a multilayered reflection on purity, ideology, violence, and child rearing. In this tense black-and-white whodunit, mysterious events occur in a small town on the German-Polish border in 1913-14. A tripwire fells the doctor's horse; a farmhand's wife falls through the floor of a shed; a barn goes up in flames; the baron's son is terribly beaten; a girls takes claims to clairvoyance; a mentally disabled boy is tortured and maimed. While the film unfolds on the eve of the First World War, the violence evokes other historical moments: the breakup of the multi ethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire, the rise of National Socialism, the emergence of 1960s German terrorism, and religious fundamentalism post 9/11. Fatima Naqvi's book looks at Haneke's technique of combining various histories in the digital era. It also reflects on the guise of literariness and historical authenticity in which the director clothes this fictional film. It meditates on the film's inscription techniques and its ability to appeal to international audiences. Naqvi shows that The White Ribbon bespeaks a certain historical "translatability" into historical and aesthetic contexts outside of Germany-in marked contrast to the historical specificity it conveys on a surface level.

      Trade Review
      Naqvi hopes to counter the impression some critics were left with: that . . . the film . . . argues that no one is responsible for Nazi violence. She argues convincingly that Haneke's specific indictment of Enlightenment conceptions of pedagogy and their nineteenth-century practices do in fact point to a culprit. [Those practices] "made German systems of hypocrisy, collusion, and oppression possible across generations" (78), and Haneke's specific aesthetic paradigms and film techniques make that argument clear. -- Noah Soltau * GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Literariness Inscriptions Black Pedagogy Working Through Working Through Women's Meta-Commentary Germanness An Ecology of Images The Unresolved Mystery Coda Credits Notes

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