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1998

6 x 9 in.
208 pp., 11 b&w photos
Out of print

 
 
 
     

Feminism, Film, Fascism
Women's Auto/biographical Film in Postwar Germany

By Susan E. Linville

 
Table of Contents and Excerpt
 
 

   
  available through netLibrary
   
  available through Questia
   
 

"Susan Linville is an excellent writer, and she poses a very serious and persuasive challenge to much recent work on post-1945 German culture and cinema."

—Patrice Petro, author of Joyless Streets: Women and Melodramatic Representation in Weimar Germany

German society's inability and/or refusal to come to terms with its Nazi past has been analyzed in many cultural works, including the well-known books Society without the Father and The Inability to Mourn. In this pathfinding study, Susan Linville challenges the accepted wisdom of these books by focusing on a cultural realm in which mourning for the Nazi past and opposing the patriarchal and authoritarian nature of postwar German culture are central concerns—namely, women's feminist auto/biographical films of the 1970s and 1980s.

After a broad survey of feminist theory, Linville analyzes five important films that reflect back on the Third Reich through the experiences of women of different ages—Marianne Rosenbaum's Peppermint Peace, Helma Sanders-Brahms's Germany, Pale Mother, Jutta Brückner's Hunger Years, Margarethe von Trotta's Marianne and Juliane, and Jeanine Meerapfel's Malou. By juxtaposing these films with the accepted theories on German culture, Linville offers a fresh appraisal not only of the films' importance but especially of their challenge to misogynist interpretations of the German failure to grieve for the horrors of its Nazi past.

Susan E. Linville is Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado at Denver, where she directs the film studies program.


 Also by the Author   History Films, Women, and Freud's Uncanny
  Of Related Interest   Hake, Popular Cinema of the Third Reich

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