ABSTRACT

Through a series of detailed film case histories ranging from The Great Dictator to Hiroshima mon amour to The Lives of Others, The Aesthetics of Antifascist Film: Radical Projection explores the genesis and recurrence of antifascist aesthetics as it manifests in the WWII, Cold War and Post-Wall historical periods.

Emerging during a critical moment in film history—1930s/1940s Hollywood— cinematic antifascism was representative of the international nature of antifascist alliances, with the amalgam of film styles generated in émigré Hollywood during the WWII period reflecting a dialogue between an urgent political commitment to antifascism and an equally intense commitment to aesthetic complexity. Opposed to a fascist aesthetics based on homogeneity, purity and spectacle, these antifascist films project a radical beauty of distortion, heterogeneity, fragmentation and loss. By juxtaposing documentation and the modernist techniques of surrealism and expressionism, the filmmakers were able to manifest a non-totalizing work of art that still had political impact.

Drawing on insights from film and cultural studies, aesthetic and ethical philosophy, and socio-political theory, this book argues that the artistic struggles with political commitment and modernist strategies of representation during the 1930s and 40s resulted in a distinctive, radical aesthetic form that represents an alternate strand of post-modernism.

chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction

Face-To-Face with the Angel of History

part I|102 pages

Murderers Among Us

chapter 3|27 pages

Radical Projection

chapter 4|19 pages

Great Dictators

chapter 5|19 pages

Paranoia and Pedagogy

part II|109 pages

Global Exiles During the Cold War

chapter 6|26 pages

Radical Beauty

chapter 7|25 pages

Forbidden Games

chapter 8|28 pages

Perversion and Pervasion

chapter 9|28 pages

Radical Transmissions