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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV044284790
    ISSN: 0162-2870
    In: October / Ed.: Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe [u.a.], Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.], Fall 1988, 46, Seite 151-177, 0162-2870
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Author information: Jameson, Fredric 1934-2024
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  • 2
    UID:
    b3kat_BV044272572
    ISBN: 978-3-8471-0420-9
    In: pages:77-82
    In: Glass shards / Richard Langston ... (Hg.), Göttingen, 2015, Seite 77-82, 978-3-8471-0420-9
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Author information: Bowie, Andrew 1952-
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :The MIT Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9961267973202883
    Format: 1 online resource (448 pages).
    ISBN: 0-262-34667-2
    Series Statement: October books
    Content: The first English-language monograph devoted to the full oeuvre of Alexander Kluge, the prolific German filmmaker, television producer, digital entrepreneur, author, thinker, and public intellectual. Alexander Kluge (born 1932) is a German filmmaker, author, television producer, theorist, and digital entrepreneur. Since 1960, he has made fourteen feature films and twenty short films and has written more than thirty books--including three with Marxist philosopher Oskar Negt. His television production company has released more than 3,000 features, in which Kluge converses with real or fictional experts or creates thematic montages. He also maintains a website on which he reassembles segments from his film and television work. To call Kluge "prolific" would be an understatement. This is the first English-language monograph devoted to the full scope of Kluge's work, from his appearance on the cultural scene in the 1960s to his contributions to New German Cinema in the 1970s and early 1980s to his recent collaborations with such artists as Gerhard Richter. In Toward Fewer Images, Philipp Ekardt offers both close analyses of Kluge's individual works and sustained investigations of his overarching (and perpetual) production. Ekardt discusses Kluge's image theory and practice as developed across different media, and considers how, in relation to this theory, Kluge returns to, varies, expands, and modifies the practice of montage, including its recent manifestations in digital media--noting Kluge's counterintuitive claim that creating montages results in fewer images. Kluge's production, Ekardt argues, allows us to imagine a model of authorship and artistic production that does not rely on an accumulation of individual works over time but rather on a permanent activity of (temporalized) reworking and redifferentiation.
    Note: Preface -- Cinema and Architecture: Light Itself Cannot Be Filmed, The Finality of Buildings and Films -- Film, Likeness, Context. The History and Theory of Montage According to Alexander Kluge -- Aural TV (Tone, Voice, Noise) -- Starry Skies and Frozen Lakes: Digital Constellations -- Feeling -- The Polar Sea and Other Stills. Paraphrases on Three Themes From the Work of Caspar David Friedrich -- Passing Richter: How to Make Still Images: Toward an Extended Notion of (Klugean) Montage -- Many Media Histories (Perspective of Time) -- Short Forms, Small Units -- Permanent Accumulation, Perpetual Beginnings.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-262-03797-1
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Book
    Book
    Rochester, NY : Camden House
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047498081
    Format: 82 Seiten , Illustrationen , 20 cm
    ISBN: 9781640140769
    Series Statement: German film classics
    Content: "Alexander Kluge achieved his breakthrough at the 1966 Venice Biennale with his first feature, Yesterday Girl (Abschied von gestern), but it is arguably his 1979 film The Patriot (Die Patriotin) that first embodied the great heights his storytelling could reach. Titled after its heroine, the history teacher Gabi Teichert, The Patriot is, however, much more than just a curious story about a headstrong pedagogue intent on teaching kids a version of German history that does not end in war and death: it is one of the finest examples of Kluge's exploration of the poetic force of Frankfurt School Critical Theory. This book pursues The Patriot's conception as a cinematic extension of the theoretical agenda that Kluge and social philosopher Oskar Negt began developing just as the Frankfurt School's first generation was ending. It will guide twenty-first-century English-language readers past superficial interpretations of the film's engagement with German history. By asking how and why The Patriot brings the twin concepts of history and obstinacy (the inherent human propensity to resist capitalism's forces of expropriation and alienation) to the screen, this book revitalizes Kluge's film for the new millennium"--
    Note: What's in a title? -- Alexander Kluge and the trouble with The female patriot -- Sequence 1 : Gabi Teichert and Corporal Wieland's wandering knee -- Sequences 2-4 : worldly modes of knowledge production-archeology, astrophysics, politics, folklore -- Sequences 5-7 : obstinacy and the intrusions of instrumental reason -- Sequences 9-11 : natural history as a constellation of trees -- Sequence 12 : relationality between the living and the dead -- From Antigone to Orpheus
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 9781787448636
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Die Patriotin
    Author information: Langston, Richard 1970-
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  • 5
    UID:
    almahu_9948208568502882
    Format: 240 p. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 1999.
    ISBN: 9780230376977
    Series Statement: Romanticism in Perspective:Texts, Cultures, Histories
    Content: Cultural Politics in the 1790s examines the relationship between sentimental literature, political activism and the public sphere at the end of the eighteenth century. Drawing on critical theorists such as Habermas, Negt and Kluge, Marcuse and Foucault, it attempts to demonstrate how major literary and political figures of the 1790s can be read in terms of the broader dynamics of modernity. Reading a diverse range of political and literary material from the period, it examines how relationships between the aesthetic and the political, the private and the public, mark the emergence and consolidation of bourgeois behavioural norms and the simultaneous marginalization of potentially more radical forms of political and cultural production.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9780333734988
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781349408207
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9781349408191
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9780312216450
    Language: English
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