Description: A comprehensive reassessment of Weimar culture and Hollywood slapstick, cartoon, and screwball cinemas, highlighting the influence of American film comedies and their stars during Germany's Weimar Republic (1918-1933).
Brief description: Lúcia Nagib is Professor of Film and Director of the Centre for Film Aesthetics and Cultures (CFAC) at the University of Reading. Her research has focused, among other subjects, on polycentric approaches to world cinema, new waves and new cinemas, cinematic realism and intermediality. She is the author of World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism (Continuum, 2011), Brazil on Screen: Cinema Novo, New Cinema, Utopia (I.B. Tauris, 2007), The Brazilian Film Revival: Interviews with 90 Filmmakers of the 90s (Editora 34, 2002), Born of the Ashes: The Auteur and the Individual in Oshima's Films (Edusp, 1995), Around the Japanese Nouvelle Vague (Editora da Unicamp, 1993) and Werner Herzog: Film as Reality (EstaçãoLiberdade, 1991). She is the editor of Impure Cinema: Intermedial and Intercultural Approaches to Film (with Anne Jerslev, 2013), Theorizing World Cinema (with Chris Perriam and Rajinder Dudrah, I.B. Tauris, 2011), Realism and the Audiovisual Media (with Cecília Mello, Palgrave, 2009), The New Brazilian Cinema (I.B. Tauris, 2003), Master Mizoguchi (Navegar, 1990) and Ozu (Marco Zero, 1990).
Review Quotes:
"A masterful study of Weimar culture's engagement with American slapstick, Paul Flaig's book uncovers forgotten histories-Berthold Brecht on Charlie Chaplin, Walter Benjamin on Frank Capra, Germany's lost Laurel and Hardy-restoring the intellectual and historical contexts that shaped this transatlantic comic dialogue. A genuinely revelatory work." --Robert J. King, Columbia University, USA
"In this brilliant book, Paul Flaig shows how the familiar characters of American slapstick (Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd, Mickey) assumed new meanings within the crisis-laden context of the Weimar Republic. Both film history and intellectual history, Weimar Slapstick covers an astonishing range of contexts, from philosophy to the Bauhaus to advertising film." --Michael Cowan, The University of Iowa, USA "Weimar Slapstick provides a welcome deep-dive into the influence of American slapstick on Weimar and post-Weimar German cultural practice and theory. It is an invaluable resource for scholars in transnational media studies and will remain essential reading for those interested in U.S.-German cultural relations for years to come." --Ervin Malakaj, University of British Columbia, Canada