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Historical Turns

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Historical Turns reassesses Weimar cinema in light of the "crisis of historicism" widely diagnosed by German philosophers in the early twentieth century. Through bold new analyses of five legendary...
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  • 30 July 2024
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Historical Turns reassesses Weimar cinema in light of the "crisis of historicism" widely diagnosed by German philosophers in the early twentieth century. Through bold new analyses of five legendary works of German silent cinema—The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Destiny, Rhythm 21, The Holy Mountain, and Metropolis—Nicholas Baer argues that films of the Weimar Republic lent vivid expression to the crisis of historical thinking. With their experiments in cinematic form and style, these modernist films revealed the capacity of the medium to engage with fundamental questions about the philosophy of history. Reconstructing the debates over historicism that unfolded during the initial decades of moving-image culture, Historical Turns proposes a more reflexive mode of historiography and expands the field of film and media philosophy. The book excavates a rich archive of ideas that illuminate our own moment of rapid media transformation and political, economic, and environmental crises around the globe.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 272
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 30 July 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520398825
Format: Paperback
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"This remarkable intellectual history excavates the scope and significance of the reaction against the entrenched ‘historicism’ that engaged German critics and filmmakers in the 1920s. . . . Baer’s signal achievement, however, is in the compelling case he makes that motion picture film was formally inextricable from philosophical thought about the mechanical device and its image that defined perception as well as delivered representations of the world. . . . A model for our time."

Nicholas Baer is Assistant Professor of German at the University of California, Berkeley, with affiliations in Film & Media, Critical Theory, and Jewish Studies. He is coeditor of The Promise of Cinema: German Film Theory, 1907–1933Unwatchable; and Technics: Media in the Digital Age.
Contents

Acknowledgments 

Introduction

1. Historical Turns 
2. Things as they could have happened: Siegfried Kracauer and the historical film 
3. Relativist perspectivism: the cabinet of Dr. Caligari 
4. Metaphysics of death: destiny 
5. The nonsimultaneity of the simultaneous: rhythm 21 
6. Natural history: the holy mountain 
Epilogue. The Weimar analogy: metropolis and the global present 

Notes 
Bibliography 
Index