[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP - Kubrick's Mitteleuropa: The Central European imaginary in the films of Stanley Kubrick
Wed Sep 18 05:44:51 GMT 2019
KUBRICK’S MITTELEUROPA
The Central European imaginary in the films of Stanley Kubrick
edited by Nathan Abrams and Jeremi Szaniawski
Stanley Kubrick was arguably the most important American director of the
post WWII era. He was born to a secular Jewish family and was never bar
mitzva’d. However, his Jewish heritage is of great importance to the
understanding of his oeuvre, and his was specifically a Central European
Jewish background. As Kubrick told Michel Ciment, his parents had
Romanian, Polish, and Austro-Hungarian backgrounds. Accordingly, while
Jewishness runs throughout Kubrick’s oeuvre—albeit on a subsurface
level—so does a Central European sensibility occupy a strong position in
it. Kubrick married a German woman, Christiane, adopted her daughter,
and Christiane’s brother Jan was his executive producer for over twenty
years.
Like most American intellectuals of his time, Kubrick was exposed to the
writings of Sigmund Freud, Stefan Zweig, Franz Kafka, Bruno Schulz,
Hermann Hesse. The director was a keen admirer of Max Ophüls, whose
adaptations of Arthur Schnitzler he adored. Fittingly, Kubrick ended his
life and career by adapting Schnitzler’s Traumnovelle.
Kubrick’s work with Hungarian and Polish composers Bela Bartok, György
Ligeti and Krzysztof Penderecki, made their challenging work, informed
by war and the Holocaust (in the case of Ligeti and Penderecki), world
famous. They infuse his films with a sense of dread and the sublime that
are outright unlike anything the Western musical or cinematic canon was
able to summon.
Kubrick even brought touches of Mitteleuropa to outer space: the
Viennese waltzes of Johann Strauss, Jr. and the vibrant harmonies of
Richard Strauss are forever and indelibly linked with Kubrick’s 2001: A
Space Odyssey. Franz Liszt’s ‘Grey Clouds’ hover, beautiful and ominous,
over the morgue scene of Eyes Wide Shut. The music of Franz Schubert is
forever associated with the most moving scenes of Barry Lyndon.
Stretching the borders of Mitteleuropa ever so slightly, Kubrick also
used the music of Haendel for the film’s main title (the ‘sarabande’ in
its re-orchestrations courtesy of Leonard Rosenman), adored Prokofiev’s
score to Alexander Nevsky, and used the music of Beethoven and
Shostakovich in equally unforgettable ways for A Clockwork Orange and
Eyes Wide Shut.
The look of Kubrick’s films, particularly Eyes Wide Shut, was influenced
by the art of Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt and other central European artists.
While Kubrick never set his films in Central Europe (although his
Napoleon and Wartime Lies unrealized projects would have been located
there), the area looms large in his oeuvre, and parts of Barry
Lyndon and Paths of Glory were shot in Germany.
This collection seeks to elicit the ‘Mitteleuropa’ sensitivity in
Kubrick, but also invites commentary from scholars about the reception
and understanding of Kubrick in countries such as Germany, Austria,
Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Romania.
It will be our role also to determine differences between
Mitteleuropa and Eastern European Jewishness and treatments of Jewish
people (i.e. the way Jews were treated in Prussia, in Austro-Hungary,
and in the Russian Empire), the presence of Mitteleuropa (delis, shops,
music, theater, etc.) in New York during Kubrick's childhood, i.e. the
presence of German and Polish alongside Central and Eastern European
Jewish émigrés at the time.
Possible topics might include any of the following, but feel free to
send us your own suggestions:
_ approaches to the reception of Kubrick's films in the Eastern bloc and
in the post-communist era
_ the influence of Kubrick's films on contemporary Central and Eastern
European artists
_ relevant traits of Mitteleuropa culture running through Kubrick's oeuvre
_ Kubrick and Viennese culture
_Kubrick and the Hapsburgs
_ Kubrick and Jügendstil
_ the influence of Max Ophüls
_ Kubrick and György Ligeti; and Krzysztof Penderecki; Bela Bartok,
Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Franz Liszt, but also Dmitri
Shostakovich
_ Kubrick and silent/Expressionist cinema
_ Hermann Hesse, Thomas Mann, and other German writers in Stanley
Kubrick's 'The Shining'
_Schnitzler and/or Zweig in Kubrick
_ Schulz and/or Kafka in Kubrick
_ Critical reception of Kubrick's films in the two Germanies; in
Communist Poland; in Communist Czechoslovakia...
_ Kubrick and the Danube: from the Viennese waltz to enmeshed traits of
Romanian and Jewish irony
_ Polish posters of Kubrick's films
_Kubrick in Central European translation
_Kubrick and Polanski
_Kubrick and mitteleuropean Jewishness
_Kubrick and the fin-de-siècle
_Kubrick and Viennese history, Peter Gay, Carl E. Schorske.
About the editors:
Nathan Abrams is Professor in Film at Bangor University in Wales, UK. He
is the author of, most recently, Stanley Kubrick: New York Jewish
Intellectual (Rutgers UP, 2018), Eyes Wide Shut: Stanley Kubrick and the
Making of His Final Film (with Robert Kolker; Oxford UP, 2019), and The
Bloomsbury Companion to Stanley Kubrick (Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
Jeremi Szaniawski is Amesbury Professor of Polish Language, Film,
Literature and Culture at UMass Amherst. He has published extensively on
Eastern European cinema and is the editor of After Kubrick:
a Filmmaker’s Legacy (Bloomsbury, 2020).
Please send your abstract (no more than 400 words) and short bio by
October 31st, 2019, to both (n.abrams /at/ bangor.ac.uk)
<mailto:(n.abrams /at/ bangor.ac.uk)> and (jszaniawski /at/ umass.edu)
<mailto:(jszaniawski /at/ umass.edu)>.
Submissions in German, Polish, Russian, Czech or Hungarian – to be
translated into English – will also be considered. However, we ask that
the initial abstract be sent in English.
Direct and general queries to Jeremi Szaniawski at (jszaniawski /at/ umass.edu)
<mailto:(jszaniawski /at/ umass.edu)>
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]