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Gendering History on Screen: Women Filmmakers and Historical Films

✍ Scribed by Julia Erhart


Publisher
I.B. Tauris
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
233
Series
Library of Gender and Popular Culture 15
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


In movies about landmark historical events such as wars, occupations, or migrations or historically important personalities, there is an unspoken set of rules for how gender ought to be expressed. Often condemned by critics for being excessively emotional or pathetic, films by female directors featuring female protagonists may be popular with audiences but judged incapable of expressing ‘real’ history. Audiences learn more about the past from movies than from any other form of entertainment, and historical and heritage cinemas now comprise a burgeoning scholarly field. Yet to date there has not been a book-length analysis of female film directors’ innovations in films about the historical past. With and without critical recognition, women are making important stories about the past and bringing new representations of agency and activism to the screen, often construed in ways that mobilise the past for the present, and always filtered through the lens of contemporary feminisms. Julia Erhart’s new book situates women filmmakers’ work within a context of other women directors from France, Denmark, Iran, Australia, the UK, the United States, and Spain and draws connections between their representational strategies and their concerns with visioning the past within the prism of the present. Written in an approachable yet theoretically informed prose, Erhart compellingly explores how foundational historiographic concepts like valour, memory, and resistance are re-envisioned within uniquely revised sub-genres that include biopics, historical documentaries, Holocaust movies, and films about the ‘War on Terror’. Gendering History on Screen demonstrates how directors shape audiences’ sense of the past, contour globally-relevant themes and narratives to suit female characters, and map a critique of national policies and institutions on to contemporary feminisms. Gendering History will be invaluable to students and scholars of historical film and women’s cinema.

Review
`Drawing on insightful readings of a diverse array of films including Monster, Nadar, La rafle/The Round Up and Zero Dark Thirty, Erhart has crafted an eminently readable study of how female directors reshape historical film to make room for women's perspectives' - Julianne Pidduck, Associate Professor, Department of Communication, the University of Montreal and author of Contemporary Costume Film

About the Author
Julia Erhart is associate professor in the School of Humanities and Creative Arts at Flinders University. She researches in the areas of contemporary women filmmakers and feminist and LGBT representations in film and television and is the recipient of a grant from the Australian Academy of the Humanities (2016), a Citation for Outstanding Contribution to Student Learning from the Australian Office for Learning and Teaching (2014), and a fellowship from Fulbright (2000).

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Author Biography
Library of Gender and Popular Culture
Published and forthcoming titles
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Series Editors’ Foreword
Introduction
Chapter Summary
1 Women Writing History Through Film
Women Writing History: Contexts and Opportunities
Performative Authorship
History on Film: from Robert Rosenstone to A League of Their Own
‘Citable in all its Moments’: In-between Spaces and Sewing Machines
Conclusion
2 Reclaiming Undeserving Women: Contemporary Female Biopics
From Positive Images to Undeserving Subjects: A Place for Women?
Oppositional Medicine: The Case of Augustine
Class and Voice: Ambiguity in Monster
Affect and Ageing: The Iron Lady
3 Feminist First-Person Documentaries: Migration, Internment, Reconciliation
First-Person Documentary: Terms and Terrain
First-Person Documentary: Women Directors
Performing Memory
4 Revisiting Resistance and Occupation in Holocaust Films
Complicating Collaboration
Europeanising the Holocaust
Reconfiguring Resistance
Women and Resistance
Mimicry and Doubling
Vergangenheitsbewältigung
5 Gendering Iraq and Afghanistan War Movies
The Paradox of Exceptionalism
Gendering the War ‘Back Home’
Movies from the Periphery: Occupation
Conclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Filmography
Index

✦ Subjects


Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Performing Arts, Gender Studies, Social Science, Women's Studies, Film, Entertainment, History & Criticism


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