Between 1929 and 1942, Hungary's motion picture industry experienced meteoric growth. It leapt into Europe's top echelon, trailing only Nazi Germany and Italy in feature output. Yet by 1944, Hungary's cinema was in shambles, internal and external forces having destroyed its unification experiments and productive capacity. This original cultural and political history examines the birth, unexpected ascendance, and wartime collapse of Hungary's early sound cinema by placing it within a complex international nexus. Detailing the interplay of Hungarian cultural and political elites, Jewish film professionals and financiers, Nazi officials, and global film moguls, David Frey demonstrates how the transnational process of forging an industry designed to define a national culture proved particularly contentious and surprisingly contradictory in the heyday of racial nationalism and antisemitism.



Autorentext

David Frey is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, United States Military Academy at West Point.



Inhalt

Introduction
Chapter 1 - When Silence became Loud. The Silent Era and the Origins of Sound
Chapter 2 - Constructing the Fantasy of Hungary. Elite Concepts of the National
Chapter 3 - National Cinema, International Stage. Film Trade and Foreign Relations
Chapter 5 - The Flawed Christian National System
Chapter 6 - The War
Chapter 7 - The National Spirit Doesn't Stick to Celluloid. Hungary's Failed Nationalist Film Experiments
Conclusion

Titel
Jews, Nazis and the Cinema of Hungary
Untertitel
The Tragedy of Success, 1929-1944
EAN
9781786730619
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
28.02.2017
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
51.17 MB
Anzahl Seiten
480