Danish and German Silent Cinema - by Lars-Martin Sørensen & Casper Tybjerg
About this item
Highlights
- The book examines how Danish and German film interacted with one another from 1910 through World War I till the advent of sound around 1930.
- Author(s): Lars-Martin Sørensen & Casper Tybjerg
- 264 Pages
- Performing Arts, Film
Description
About the Book
Analyses the cultural exchange of two important and highly entangled European film nations of the silent era.Book Synopsis
The book examines how Danish and German film interacted with one another from 1910 through World War I till the advent of sound around 1930. The film businesses of the two countries were closely connected, and many film professionals crossed back and forth across national borders. The studies in this book include production and distribution history, censorship, celebrity studies, and aesthetic analysis. They contribute to European film and cultural history through extensive empirical investigation of films, persons and companies. The underlying perspective is that of entangled film history, an approach that stresses cross-border interchanges and mutual influences. Written by an international team of scholars, the book marks the conclusion of a four-year collective research project running alongside the stumfilm.dk initiative to digitise the entire Danish silent film heritage.
Review Quotes
This collection offers fresh insights into the complex question of a common Danish and German film culture. Based on an entangled film history and access to digitized Danish periodicals and films, it meticulously analyses migrant directors, actors, genre, and style, alongside each nation's leading stars.--Martin Loiperdinger, University of Trier