History, Ideology and Aesthetics
Buch, Englisch, 301 Seiten, Format (B × H): 153 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 533 g
ISBN: 978-3-031-57000-1
Verlag: Springer Nature Switzerland
Swedish children’s cinema has a long and rich history. It encompasses the rascal films of the 1920s, the realism of the 1940s, the ambitious artistic renewal of the 1970s, the child empowering films of the 1990s through the early 2000s, and the multiple, exceedingly popular, Astrid Lindgren adaptations across the decades. Devoted to exploring this cinematographic legacy, this book offers close readings across academic disciplines, probing various genres, eras, media debates, transmediations, and audience-receptions. Childhood studies, with its critical comprehension of society’s changing notions of childhood, here serves as a key framework in fruitful combination with, inter alia, feminist, queer, intermedial, postcolonial, and eco-critical perspectives. This collection fills an important knowledge gap on Swedish film history as well as the distinctly Nordic tradition of children’s culture, and thereby contributes to the burgeoning field of international children’s cinema research. It is introduced with a foreword by Mark Cousins.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Theater- und Filmwissenschaft | Andere Darstellende Künste Filmwissenschaft, Fernsehen, Radio Filmtheorie, Filmanalyse
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Spezielle Soziologie Kultursoziologie
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Altersgruppen Kinder- und Jugendsoziologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Theater- und Filmwissenschaft | Andere Darstellende Künste Filmwissenschaft, Fernsehen, Radio Filmgeschichte
- Geisteswissenschaften Theater- und Filmwissenschaft | Andere Darstellende Künste Filmwissenschaft, Fernsehen, Radio Filmgattungen, Filmgenre
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1-Introduction: On the history, ideology, and aesthetics of Swedish children’s cinema.- Part I: Histories Of a Nation.- Chapter 2. ‘D’ya know where they’re from?’: Migrants in Swedish children’s film.- Chapter 3. Beauties and beasts: On the child-nature relationship in Swedish children’s film. -Chapter 4. Like other kids, yet different: Sámi children in Swedish children’s film.- Chapter 5. Beyond subjugation and stereotype: The representation of girls in Part II: Ideologies of Childhoods.- Chapter 6. The prankster, the funster, and the overhelper: The comedy of mischief in the Swedish Chapter 7. Foolish fathers in Swedish family film: Involved fatherhood and middle-class masculinity as spectacle.- Chapter 8. A relationship revolution: Child-centred parenthood in contemporary children’s cinema.- Chapter 9. ‘The movie ended quite well, but not that well, and I liked that because that’s how it is in reality’: Reception of and debates on Suzanne Osten’s films for children.- Chapter 10. We’ll never be those kids again: Queer perspectives on children’s cinema.- Part III: Aesthetics And Methods of Children’s Cinema.- Chapter 11. Audiovisual empathy: Adopting a child’s perspective in children’s cinema.- Chapter 12. Astrid Lindgren’s early filmmaking: Transmediations across radio, books, and moving images.- Chapter 13. Per A°hlin: The master of Swedish animation.- Chapter 14. Freedom captured: Film adaptations of Maria Gripe’s children’s books.- Chapter 15. ‘We just don’t know!’: A metamodal method for learning through film.