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[ecrea] Moscow conference Sept 2014
Tue Oct 15 02:43:39 GMT 2013
Conference: The Cold War on Film: Then and Now
An international conference on ‘The Cold War on Film: Then and Now’ will
be held at the German Historical Institute in Moscow, Russia, on 19-20
September 2014. The conference is supported by the Wilson Center in
Washington, DC, the University of Hertfordshire in the UK, and the
German Historical Institute in Moscow.
A focus on culture has been one of the major innovations in the study of
the Cold War over the past decade. This has helped historians and the
general public to view the Cold War as a conflict of ideas and images as
well as bullets and bombs. Film is thought to have played a particularly
important role throughout the Cold War. Scholars now recognise that
cinema was a powerful vehicle of entertainment and propaganda, one that,
among other things, showed audiences the ‘reality’ of what was for many
people a peculiarly abstract conflict. Few courses about the Cold War
taught in schools and universities today would be complete without clips
from movies like Grigorii Aleksandrov’s Second World War drama Meeting
on the Elbe (1949) or Stanley Kubrick’s anti-nuclear farce Dr
Strangelove (1963).
Up to now, most work on the relationship between the Cold War and cinema
has focused on Hollywood. This is understandable given the headlines
that the witch-hunt of leftists in Hollywood attracted during the
McCarthy era and the global reach of the American film industry.
Nonetheless, this American-centric approach has tended to skew the
picture overall, leaving some with the impression that Hollywood was
subjected to unique political pressures during the Cold War and that the
American film industry won the cinematic Cold War almost by default.
This conference seeks, first of all, to take stock of what we now know
about the role played by the American film industry during the conflict.
Secondly, it aims to put Hollywood’s ‘performance’ in an international,
comparative context. The conference will look beyond Hollywood and
explore how cinemas from different areas of the world - East, West,
North and South - treated and were affected by the Cold War. Among the
questions papers might address are: Can we identify a range of important
players in the cinematic Cold War? What are the similarities and
differences between the ways that national film industries framed the
Cold War? Which film industries gained from the Cold War and which lost?
What was distinctive about cinema’s contribution to the Cold War? What
does a comparative analysis of Cold War cinema tell us about the uses of
propaganda during the conflict and about the cultural Cold War more
generally?
The conference has a third major aim. As well as looking at cinema
during the Cold War, it also wishes to explore how filmmakers have dealt
with the subject since the conflict ended. A lot has been written about
how filmmakers ‘remade’ the Second World War in the 1950s and 1960s and
how that might have influenced wider beliefs about that conflict. We now
need to look at whether and if so how filmmakers have done the same with
the Cold War. We need to begin to map out how cinema (and popular
culture generally) has replayed or refought the Cold War over the past
quarter of a century, and to consider its potential impact on
perceptions of the Cold War. Among the questions papers might address in
this regard are: How prominent a subject has the Cold War been on cinema
screens since 1989? Which national cinemas have paid the Cold War most
attention, how and why? Which cinemas have effectively airbrushed the
Cold War? What roles have governments or other organisations played in
reworking the Cold War on the big screen?
Our approach is interdisciplinary, and we welcome proposals for papers
from scholars of all fields, including history, film studies,
literature, cultural studies, and the social sciences. The languages of
the conference will be English and Russian. Proposals of 500 words,
together with a brief CV, should be sent to Professor Tony Shaw at
(a.t.shaw /at/ herts.ac.uk)<mailto:(a.t.shaw /at/ herts.ac.uk)> by 31 December 2013.
Invitations to the conference will be issued by 31 January 2014. Papers
(up to 25 pages in length) should be distributed to all participants one
month before the event. All lodging and meals for the duration of the
conference will be covered. A limited number of grants will be given to
contributors to cover their travel costs.
Tony Shaw, University of Hertfordshire
(a.t.shaw /at/ herts.ac).ukmailto:(a.t.shaw /at/ herts.ac.uk)
Sergey Kudryashov, German Historical Institute, Moscow
Sergey.Kudryashov@dhi-moskau.orgmailto:(Sergey.Kudryashov /at/ dhi-moskau.org)
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