ABSTRACT

The burgeoning scholarship on Western health films stands in stark contrast to the vacuum in the historical conceptualization of Eastern European films. This book develops a nonlinear historical model that revises their unique role in the inception of national cinematography and establishing supranational health security.

Readers witness the revelation of an unknown history concerning how the health films produced in Eastern European countries not only adopted Western patterns of propaganda but actively participated in its formation, especially with regard to those considered “others”: Women and the populations of the periphery. The authors elaborate on the long “echo” of the discursive practices introduced by health films within public health propaganda, as well as the attempts to negate and deconstruct such practices by rebellious filmmakers. A wide range of methods, including the analysis of the sociological biographies of filmmakers, the historical reconstruction of public campaigns against diseases and an investigation into the production of health films, contextualizes these films along a multifaceted continuum stretching between the adaptation of global patterns and the cultivation of national authenticities.

The book is aimed at those who study the history of film, the history of public health, Central and Eastern European countries and global history.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 International license.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

Nonlinear historicizing as a method for studying health films
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part 1|45 pages

Child and nation in the focus of rescue-mission health films

chapter 1|9 pages

The interwar obsession with family

Eugenic pathos vs. humanistic skepticism
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part 2|42 pages

Health films for teaching children

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chapter 7|15 pages

Health films for children

Between cultural reciprocity and popular scientism
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part 3|67 pages

Men and women in the focus of health films

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part 4|56 pages

Health films for the interwar periphery

chapter 11|19 pages

Stín ve světle as the first health film for the periphery

The birth of the canon
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chapter 12|15 pages

202Ikina sudbina and Dobro za zlo

Extending the canon of health films to the Muslim periphery
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chapter 13|20 pages

Films of the National Tuberculosis Association

Rooting health films for the periphery in the racial hierarchies of the interwar United States
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chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Health film as fantasy and event
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