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siting futurity
a former ’68er turned corporate shill, who puts their revolution-
ary principles to a test. Released in the year the eu enlarged by
ten countries, most from behind what had been the Iron Cur-
tain, Hans Weingart ner’s smash hit was celebrated as a welcome
repoliticization of German filmmaking for a new generation
and part of a larger turn in German cinema towards social and
political issues.1 Sabine Hake spoke of “an emerging cinema of
dissent” in the “new Germany” that found itself in a “unified
Europe” (Hake 2008, 192; italics added) and listed Weingart ner
among
several socially conscious directors — some of them trained
or born in the GDR — [who] have enlisted the social and cul-
tural topographies of post-unification Berlin in diagnosing
the failures of reunification [… and t]he affinities between
established subcultures and the new urban underclass. (Hake
2008, 220)
For his part Eric Rentschler, who included Weingart ner in a
group with Angela Schanelec, Almut Getto Moore, Benjamin
Quabeck, Hans Christian Schmidt, Andreas Kleinert, Andreas
Dresen, Oskar Roehler, Fatih Akin, and Tom Tykwer, was also
very positive about German cinema’s prospects in the new mil-
lennium, writing that: “Contemporary German films, at long
last, once again manifest an ability to take risks, to dare to be
spontaneous and tentative. By illuminating obscured spaces and
respecting marginal perspectives, they seek to expand our re-
gard both for what is real and what might be possible” (Rent-
schler 2002, 5; italics added). It is difficult to capture Weingart-
ner’s goals as a filmmaker more precisely. Yet whenever scholars
compare his work to others, they invariably end up noting that
he “sets himself apart not only from other contemporary Ger-
1 This trend has received attention in a number of survey works, such as
Cooke (2012) and the second edition of Hake (2008), and edited collec-
tions: Fisher and Prager (2010), Cooke and Homewood (2011), Mueller
and Skidmore (2012), and Nagib and Jerslev (2013).
Siting Futurity
The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Titel
- Siting Futurity
- Untertitel
- The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Autor
- Susan Ingram
- Verlag
- punctumbooks
- Ort
- New York
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-953035-48-6
- Abmessungen
- 12.6 x 20.2 cm
- Seiten
- 224
- Schlagwörter
- activism, Austria, contemporary art, contemporary theater, protest culture, radicalism, social protest, Vienna
- Kategorie
- Geographie, Land und Leute
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface 11
- Introduction 19
- 1. (Re)Forming Vienna’s Culture of Resistance: The Proletenpassions @ #Arena 39
- 2. Converting Kebab and Currency into Community on Planet #Ottakring 57
- 3. Lazarus’s Necropolitical Afterlife at Vienna’s #Volkstheater 81
- 4. Hardly Homemad(e): #Schlingensief’s Container 101
- 5. From Grand Hotels to Tiny Treasures: Wes Anderson and the Ruin Porn Worlds of Yesterday 119
- 6. Capitalism, Schizophrenia, and #Vanlife: The Alpine Edukation of Hans Weingarter 143
- 7. #Hallstatt: Welcome to Jurassic World 161
- Bibliography 189
- Filmography 215