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Until the 1990s, German film studies focused primarily on a limited canon of art-house films and auteur directors, with particular emphasis on two “golden eras” of filmmaking — Weimar cinema of the 1920s and the New German Cinema of the 1970s and early 80s. Since German unification, scholars have begun to question the assumptions according to which German cinema had previously been defined, particularly those concerning auteurism and “the national,” the divide between popular and art cinema, and the place of cinema among other media. As a consequence, recent scholarship has sharpened our awareness of the multiplicity and heterogeneity of German cinema and visual culture, focusing in turn on early cinema, Nazi entertainment film and culture, Hollywood exile, the colonial and postcolonial elements of German feature films, queer cinema, German-Turkish filmmakers, the legacy of DEFA, and other aspects of German visual culture.

Screen Cultures pursues these important new lines of inquiry, addressing pluralistic notions of German filmmaking and visual culture in order to meet the needs of today’s college curriculums in both German Studies departments and in Film and Media Studies programs. Interdisciplinary in scope, the series brings into dialog different approaches to the moving image and visual culture — ranging from historical and cultural studies to formal and theoretical explorations, from local perspectives to global ones. The series editors seek both monographs and well-focused collected volumes on topics of strong interest to German film and/or visual studies. All submissions are subjected to rigorous peer review before acceptance.

2008 saw the publication of the first three books in the series:

  • Visualizing the Holocaust: Documents, Aesthetics, and Memory, edited by David Bathrick, Brad Prager, and Michael D. Richardson
  • Women in Weimar Fashion: Discourses and Displays in German Culture, 1918-1933, by Mila Ganeva
  • After the Avant-Garde: Contemporary German and Austrian Experimental Film, edited by Randall Halle and Reinhild Steingröver

Further volumes contracted to appear in the series include:

  • After the Digital Divide: German Aesthetic Theory in the Age of New Media, edited by Lutz Koepnick and Erin McGlothlin (2009)
  • New History of German Cinema, edited by Jennifer Kapczynski and Michael D. Richardson (2010/2011)

The Series Editors:

Gerd Gemünden is Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities and Professor of German Studies, Film Studies, and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College. He is the author of Framed Visions: Popular Culture, Americanization and the Contemporary German and Austrian Imagination (1998) and Filmemacher mit Akzent: Billy Wilder in Hollywood (2006), and editor of volumes on Wenders, Fassbinder, Sirk, and an anthology of critical writings on Marlene Dietrich. Contact: Dept. of German Studies, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755; gerd.gemunden@dartmouth.edu

Johannes von Moltke is Associate Professor in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures and the Department of Screen Arts and Cultures at the University of Michigan. He is an editor of The Germanic Review and the author of No Place Like Home: Locations of Heimat in German Cinema (2005) as well as numerous articles on German film and popular culture. Contact: Dept. of German Languages and Literatures, The University of Michigan, 3110 MLB, Ann Arbor, MI 48103; moltke@umich.edu

Editorial Office: 156 Water Street, Elizabethtown, NY 12932; jwalker8751@charter.net