
The Lives of Others
Description
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Annie Ring analyses the film's cinematography, mise-en-scène and editing, tracing connections with Hollywood movies such as Casablanca and Hitchcock's Torn Curtain in the film's portrayal of an individual rebelling against a brutal dehumanising regime. Drawing on archival sources, including primary research from the Stasi files themselves, as well as Enlightenment philosophies of art and Brecht's theories on theatre dating from his GDR years, she explores the film's strong but much-disputed claims to historical authenticity. She examines the way the film tracks the world-changing political shift that took place at the end of the Cold War - away from the collective dreams of socialism and towards the dreams of the private individual, arguing that this is what makes it at once widely appealing and fascinatingly problematic. In doing so, she highlights why The Lives of Others is a crucial film for thinking at the horizon between film and recent world history.
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Person
Annie Ring is Associate Professor of German and comparative film, literature and cultural theory at UCL, UK. Her research focuses on film, surveillance, technology and the politics of subjectivity. She is author of After the Stasi (Bloomsbury Academic, 2015). She is co-editor of Architecture and Control (2018), Uncertain Archives: Critical Keywords for Big Data (2021) and has contributed to The German Cinema Book (British Film Institute, 2020).
Content
Introduction
1. A Contemporary Classic - and a Conservative One?
2. The Authenticity of a Very Hollywood Film Mode
3. Depicting the Stasi's Surveillance Regime
4. The Good Spy of East Berlin: Captain Gerd Weisler
5. Brecht, Performance, and the Politics of an Aesthetic Education
6. 'Sister Art Is/Coming on Stage': Christa- Maria Sieland
7. Success? Georg Dreyman and German Unification
Conclusion
Notes
Credits
Bibliography
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