Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Aesthetics of Crisis: Art Cinema and Neoliberalism
- 2 Beyond Neoliberalism? Gift Economies in the Films of the Dardenne Brothers
- 3 The Resurgence of Modernism and its Critique of Liberalism in the Cinema of Crisis
- 4 Post-Fordism in Active Life, Industrial Revolution and The Nothing Factory
- 5 Re-evaluating Crisis Politics in the Work of Aku Louhimies
- 6 Crisis of Cinema/Cinema of Crisis: The Car Crash and the Berlin School
- 7 Representing and Escaping the Crises of Neoliberalism: Veiko Õunpuu’s Films and Methods
- 8 The Future is Past, the Present Cannot be Fixed: Ken Loach and the Crisis
- 9 It Could Happen to You: Empathy and Empowerment in Iberian Austerity Cinema
- 10 The Double Form of Neoliberal Subjugation: Crisis on the Eastern European Screen
- 11 Housing Problems: Britain’s Housing Crisis and Documentary
- 12 Miserable Journeys, Symbolic Rescues: Refugees and Migrants in the Cinema of Fortress Europe
- 13 Frontlines: Migrants in Hungarian Documentaries in the 2010s
- 14 Mongrel Attunement in White God
- 15 Labour and Exploitation by Displacement in Recent European Film
- 16 A Hushed Crisis: The Visual Narratives of (Eastern) Europe’s Antiziganism
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Aesthetics of Crisis: Art Cinema and Neoliberalism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Aesthetics of Crisis: Art Cinema and Neoliberalism
- 2 Beyond Neoliberalism? Gift Economies in the Films of the Dardenne Brothers
- 3 The Resurgence of Modernism and its Critique of Liberalism in the Cinema of Crisis
- 4 Post-Fordism in Active Life, Industrial Revolution and The Nothing Factory
- 5 Re-evaluating Crisis Politics in the Work of Aku Louhimies
- 6 Crisis of Cinema/Cinema of Crisis: The Car Crash and the Berlin School
- 7 Representing and Escaping the Crises of Neoliberalism: Veiko Õunpuu’s Films and Methods
- 8 The Future is Past, the Present Cannot be Fixed: Ken Loach and the Crisis
- 9 It Could Happen to You: Empathy and Empowerment in Iberian Austerity Cinema
- 10 The Double Form of Neoliberal Subjugation: Crisis on the Eastern European Screen
- 11 Housing Problems: Britain’s Housing Crisis and Documentary
- 12 Miserable Journeys, Symbolic Rescues: Refugees and Migrants in the Cinema of Fortress Europe
- 13 Frontlines: Migrants in Hungarian Documentaries in the 2010s
- 14 Mongrel Attunement in White God
- 15 Labour and Exploitation by Displacement in Recent European Film
- 16 A Hushed Crisis: The Visual Narratives of (Eastern) Europe’s Antiziganism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In modern Greek κριση/krisemeans both a moment of difficulty, and judgement or discernment. The etymological origins of the English word ‘crisis’ are Greek, and its secondary meaning in Greek, that of judgement, was in use in the English language until the early eighteenth century. The first non-specialised definition of crisis in the Oxford English Dictionary describes it as a ‘vitally important or decisive stage in the progress of anything; a turning-point; also, a state of affairs in which a decisive change for better or worse is imminent; now applied esp. to times of difficulty, insecurity, and suspense in politics or commerce’. This definition shows the crucial link between the two Greek meanings of the word and between the English word's previous and current usages. A crisis is a period of difficulty or insecurity, a moment of decisive change, a turning point. To ensure that this change or turn is a positive one, one must exercise good judgement and sound decision making. As Eugene Hollahan asserts, crisis is used ‘as signifier for stressful circumstances, as signifier for dialectical turning points, and as signifier evoking, inducing or even necessitating decisions or judgments’ (1992: 4). In other words, crisis challenges our intellectual faculties and compels us to use them.
Throughout its history art cinema has been perceived as an intellectual mode of film making. Avoiding many of the emotional manipulations of popular forms, art films use detachment, analytical style and ambiguity to pose difficult questions to the viewer. Noël Burch defines modernist cinema, of which much of post-war art cinema was a prime example, as a mode of film making that subverts, deconstructs and critically challenges the aesthetic and ideological tenets of classical cinema (1981: 15). Alexandre Astruc saw the development of cinema after 1945, the period in which art cinema became institutionalised and stabilised as a recognisable form, as moving in the direction of philosophy and writing, one in which film language could be used to express abstract thoughts (1968: 18–20; see also Kovács 2007: 37–9). The association of art cinema with an intellectual mode of address presents it as a promising candidate for the facilitation of critical analysis in a time of crisis.
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- Information
- Cinema of CrisisFilm and Contemporary Europe, pp. 25 - 42Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2020