ABSTRACT

After WWII, cinema was everywhere: in movie theatres, public squares, factories, schools, trial courts, trains, museums, and political meetings. Seen today, documentaries and newsreels, as well as the amateur production, show the kaleidoscopic portrait of a changing Europe. How did these cinematic images contribute to shaping the new societies emerging from the ashes of war, both in the Western and in the Eastern bloc? Why were they so crucial in framing and regulating new places and practices, political systems, economic dynamics, educational frameworks, and memory communities? This edited volume explores the multiple ways nonfiction cinema reconfigured public spaces, collective participation, democratisation, and governmentality between 1944 and 1956. Looking back at it through a transnational perspective and the critical category of spatiality, nonfiction cinema appears in a new light: simultaneously as a specifically situated and as a highly mobile medium, it was a fundamental agent in reshaping Europe’s shared identity and culture in a defining decade.

section Section 1|4 pages

Locating Non-Fiction Film

Title

chapter 2|32 pages

Documentary Filmmaking in Postwar Germany, 1945–55

Title
An Essay on the History of Production, Distribution, and Technology 1
Size: 2.70 MB

chapter 3|22 pages

Finding the Best Time for Shorts

Title
Non-fiction Film, Non-stop Cinemas, and the Temporalities of Everyday Life of Post-WWII Audiences
Size: 1.60 MB

chapter 4|28 pages

Coproducing Postwar Socialist (Re)construction

Title
Transnational Documentaries in Eastern Europe
Size: 0.54 MB
Size: 1.16 MB

section Section 2|119 pages

Reconstructing Realities

Title

chapter 6|24 pages

“Room to Move and Space to Play”

Title
Architecture and the Marshall Plan's Cinematic Reconfiguration of Space
Size: 1.89 MB

chapter 7|18 pages

Screening Dortmund in Ruins

Title
The Role of Elisabeth Wilms's Postwar Film Footage in City Politics and Local Remembrance Culture
Size: 0.36 MB

chapter 8|24 pages

From Rubble to Ruins

Title
War Destruction, Postwar Reconstruction, and Tamed Modernization 1
Size: 1.16 MB

chapter 9|28 pages

Screening (at) the Workplace

Title
Postwar Non-fiction Cinema and the Gendered and Political Spaces of Labor 1
Size: 1.42 MB

chapter 10|21 pages

Choreographies of Public Space

Title
Non-fiction Film and Performances of Citizenship in Postwar Europe
Size: 1.17 MB

section Section 3|4 pages

Spaces of Cultural Trauma

Title

chapter 12|27 pages

Moving Accountability

Title
Trials, Transitional Justice, and Documentary Cinema 1
Size: 2.59 MB

chapter 13|22 pages

(De)constructing the Architect

Title
Modern Architecture between Praise and Criticism in Postwar Non-fiction Cinema
Size: 0.80 MB

chapter 14|20 pages

Restructuring (Post)colonial Relationships

Title
European Empires between Decolonization, Trusteeships, and a New Projection in Africa
Size: 0.41 MB

section Section 4|71 pages

Creating New Paths

Title

chapter 15|26 pages

Virtual Topographies of Memory

Title
Liberation Films as Mobile Models of Atrocity Sites 1
Size: 1.71 MB

chapter 16|21 pages

Curating Reconstruction in the Digital Realm

Title
The Online Exhibition Frames of Reconstruction
Size: 1.15 MB

chapter 17|19 pages

Teaching (with) Postwar Cinema

Title
Fostering Media Education and Transnational Historical Thinking through Non-fiction Film Heritage
Size: 0.40 MB