Description:
- It is the first dedicated study of Alain Resnais's benchmark film that draws together a range of authors across French, film and anti-colonial studies to analyse the political aesthetics of this film
- It proposes a new perspective on Alain Resnais's film by shifting it from Holocaust studies to the concept of the concentrationary universe
- It places the film in a series of contexts that enlarge the understanding of its significance as a gesture of political resistance to colonialism and totalitarianism
- It offers comparative readings of the anti-concentrationary dimension in cinema in France and elsewhere, enabling a critical reading of the films work, legacy and contradictions
Brief description:
Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of the Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History at the University of Leeds. From 2004-7 she directed a research project on Holocaust Survivors and Migratory Subjectivity. She works on difference, trauma and aesthetics in relation to art, cinema and visual culture in the 20th century. Forthcoming is After-Affect/After- Image: Trauma and Aesthetic Inscription in the Virtual Feminist Museum (Manchester University Press, 2012).
Review Quotes:
"A radical new look at Resnais's pioneering film about the Nazi Holocaust. Leading experts in French cinema, art history, Holocaust studies and trauma theory confront the film's racial dimension, clarifying both its historical anchorage and lasting significance. This well-edited volume is an important addition to the scholarship on Resnais." - Sandra Hebron, Nigel Floyd and Ginette Vincendeau, Best Moving Image Book Award committee
"The anthology comprises essays written by several leading experts on the Holocaust and its cinematic representation, Resnais' cinema, and trauma theory. They offer a wealth of information displaying often enviable in-depth historical research on the making of the film and its problems with censorship... They also take into account films dealing with the Holocaust that preceded Night and Fog... Some authors in the anthology prefer re-framing Night and Fogthrough the prism of contemporary theories in order to offer sophisticated readings of the film." - Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
"...much of enormous value can be learned from those [contributors] who seek new ways to understand this still elusive, still compelling work [Night and Fog]... these essays are whetstones to sharpen one's thinking." - Cineaste
"One should not consider [this volume] simply as yet another book on Night and Fog; we are rather dealing with a series of studies on the theme of memory in film, on the historiography and the multiple links between film and reality...The reader who is looking for reflections and inspirations on memory and film will find substantial elements in the Introduction, which perhaps is the most accomplished part with regard to the theoretical framework. But the volume as a whole suggests a multitude of perspectives that the reader, already familiar with this film, would certainly recognize, hold on to, explore or linger over." - H-France Review