ABSTRACT

This book presents a comprehensive re-examination of the cinemas of the Soviet Union and Central and Eastern Europe during the communist era. It argues that, since the end of communism in these countries, film scholars are able to view these cinemas in a different way, no longer bound by an outlook relying on binary Cold War terms. With the opening of archives in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, much more is known about these states and societies; at the same time, the field has been reinvigorated by its opening up to more contemporary concepts, themes and approaches in film studies and adjacent disciplines. Taking stock of these developments, this book presents a rich, varied tapestry, relating specific films to specific national and transnational circumstances, rather than viewing them as a single, monolithic "Cold War Communist" cinema.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Questioning and questing: re-staging state socialist cinema

part I|67 pages

On spaces and nations

chapter 1|15 pages

Squeezing space, releasing space

Spatial research in the study of Eastern European cinema

chapter 3|25 pages

Incommensurable distance

Versions of national identity in Georgian Soviet cinema

part II|74 pages

Ideologies of representation

chapter 4|17 pages

Mirrors of death

Subversive subtexts in Bulgarian cinema, 1964–1979

chapter 6|34 pages

Stalinist cinema and the search for audiences

Liubov' Orlova and the case for star studies

part III|60 pages

(Re)recordings, (re)focusings, (re)discoveries

chapter 7|21 pages

The political camera

Comparing 1956 in three moments of Hungarian history

chapter 8|14 pages

Back to the archives

The testimonial power of Soviet silent footage of the Holocaust

chapter 9|23 pages

The human and the possible

Animation in Central and Eastern Europe