Screening Vienna: The City of Dreams in English-Language Cinema and Television

Screening Vienna: The City of Dreams in English-Language Cinema and Television
Author: Timothy K. Conley
Publisher: Cambria Press
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2016-01-04
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1621967166

Vienna has been the locale for nearly one hundred and fifty films and television productions in English, from 1920s through the first years of this century, with imaginative representations of Freud, Strauss, Franz Josef, Mozart, Beethoven, and Klimt; mad scientists, assassins, spies, refugees, romantics, and American professors; historical dramas, cartoons, documentaries, and Hitchcock's only musical comedy. The "City of Dreams" has appeared as an imperial court, a center of scientific and medical research, a Jewish and Catholic homeland, a locus of international espionage and domestic crime, the destination for innocents abroad, the birthplace of the waltz, a stage for performances and performers, and the site for romantic rendezvous. For many in English-language audiences, such productions have constituted the most significant representations of Vienna, a city that historically has been the capital of one of Europe's largest empires, one of the most important centers for classical music and opera, both a victim and an accomplice of Nazi Germany, and the home of international diplomacy. Cultural historians and Austrian writers have provided significant commentary on the city, but their influence has seldom reached such an extensive audience as the films and television productions screening Vienna for English-language audiences. Screening Vienna thus analyzes the representation of Vienna and the Viennese in English-language film and television, reviews the critical reception of these productions, and measures the representations against the cultural and historical contexts and the writings of contemporary Austrian writers.The book is unique in its scope (over one hundred and fifty productions from the 1920s to 2013) and in its inclusion of leading reviews of many films, references to cultural and historical studies of Vienna, and references to modern and contemporary Austrian fiction.Thus the analysis is more extensive in its coverage and more intensive in its analysis of each film than any previous study, with a focus on scene, language, plot, characterization, and the reception of these films. Scholars and students in American cultural studies, film studies, Austrian and Viennese history, and popular culture will find the book informative and essential for studies of Vienna in the American and British imagination. Given the extensive coverage and filmography, many libraries should also view the book as a reference work, in addition to its status in cultural and film studies. The book will also be useful for film studies and American popular culture studies courses at advanced or graduate level.

Wittgenstein's Vienna

Wittgenstein's Vienna
Author: Allan Janik
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2023-11-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 1493083961

This is a remarkable book about a man (perhaps the most important and original philosopher of our age), a society (the corrupt Austro-Hungarian Empire on the eve of dissolution), and a city (Vienna, with its fin-de siècle gaiety and corrosive melancholy). The central figure in this study of a crumbling society that gave birth to the modern world is Wittgenstein, the brilliant and gifted young thinker. With others, including Freud, Viktor Adler, and Arnold Schoenberg, he forged his ideas in a classical revolt against the stuffy, doomed, and moralistic lives of the old regime. As a portrait of Wittgenstein, the book is superbly realized; it is even better as a portrait of the age, with dazzling and unusual parallels to our own confused society. “Allan Janik and Stephen Toulmin have acted on a striking premise: an understanding of prewar Vienna, Wittgenstein's native city, will make it easier to comprehend both his work and our own problems....This is an independent work containing much that is challenging, new, and useful.”—New York Times Book Review.

Vienna

Vienna
Author: Nicholas Parsons
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2008-12-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199888485

From border garrison of the Roman Empire to magnificent Baroque seat of the Hapsburgs, Vienna's fortunes swung between survival and expansion. By the late nineteenth century it had become the western capital of the sprawling Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, but the twentieth century saw it degraded to a 'hydrocephalus' cut off from its former economic hinterland. After the inglorious Nazi interlude, Vienna began the long climb back to the prosperous and cultivated city of 1.7 million inhabitants that it is today. Subjected to constant infusions of new, Vienna has both assimilated and resisted cultural influences from outside, creating its own sui generis culture.

Vienna

Vienna
Author: David Pryce-Jones
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1978
Genre: Vienna (Austria)
ISBN:

Discusses the history of Vienna and describes the city and its people today.

Heroic Imagination

Heroic Imagination
Author: Frederic Ewen
Publisher: NYU Press
Total Pages: 766
Release: 2004-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780814722251

Heroic Imagination Describes the historical period and the wide manifistation of creativity that took place between 1815 and 1848 in Europe, from Napoleon's downfall in the battle of Waterloo in 1815 to the "Restoration" that sought to bring back the old order preceding the French Revolution. While revolutions and historicle events were shaping the world, the "collective consciousness" of the public began to integrate with the creative consciousness of the individual. The creative energies of artists, philosophers, poets, political and social thinkers emerged and produced some of the most revered artistic geniuses in history, such as Beethoven, Byron, Pushkin, Balzac, Stendhal, Victor Hugo, Delacroix, Goya, and Goethe. Frederic Ewen vividly depicts the "new" world of the early nineteenth century, and the assemblage of genius that produced a body of art that has become the unforgettable property of all ages.

Hide and Seek

Hide and Seek
Author: Theresa Cahn-Tober
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2003
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780826331984

Memoirs of a Jewish woman born in Katowice, Poland, in 1936 as Irena Stefania Licht; chs. 3-10 (pp. 23-117) relate her experiences in the Holocaust. In 1939 Cahn-Tober and her parents fled to Lvov; in 1941 she was left with the Polish family of Maria Niemiec in Przemysl, where she remained for two years, posing as a non-Jew. In 1943 Niemiec, fearing for the child's safety, took her to a Catholic orphanage in Warsaw; Cahn-Tober was occasionally able to see her parents, who lived as non-Jews on the "Aryan" side. Her father disappeared during the Warsaw uprising of 1944; she, her mother, and Niemiec were sent to the village of Mstow, where they remained until the liberation. After the war Cahn-Tober's father returned and the family eventually emigrated to the U.S. The Niemieces were recognized as Righteous among the Nations in 1988.

Jews and Medicine

Jews and Medicine
Author: Frank Heynick
Publisher: KTAV Publishing House, Inc.
Total Pages: 788
Release: 2002
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780881257731

From the Middle East B.C.E. to medieval Spain through the end of WWII, Frank Heynick traces the relationship between a people and a science in Jews and Medicine: An Epic Saga. The ancient ritual of circumcision, Maimonides, the Bavarian Jacob Henle and Nobel-winner Otto Loewi make appearances in this sweeping history of literary, religious and professional links between Judaism and medical practice. Heynick, a scholar of medical history and linguistics, discusses the sale of mummified remains as a cure for disease, the ascendance of psychoanalysis and hundreds of other famous and obscure historical moments. -Publisher's Weekly.

I Have a Dream

I Have a Dream
Author: Anna Roth
Publisher: tredition
Total Pages: 97
Release: 2015-02-26
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 3732315894

Anna Roth: Rose smell of the life. What is hidden behind the rose smell of the life? Is there him really? Is he learnable? Or only do imagination things and daydreamings meet us in this elegant lyric tape? Anna Roth knows to indicate it brilliantly, as in her both already appeared lyrics to volumes with the title Rose smell of the love, also in this tape rose smell of the life a subtle balance it there is between the learnable life, i. e. of the reality in herself which comes along mostly grey dyed, and the nice things of the life which also meet us, for which we want to long and not let go any more. And she is anxious to us constantly in this world of the luck to lead the images and dreams, but also in a world of the life coping which means, there is an optimism which is invincible if I believe in it. Then behind this scenery of the positive life creation to reflect the attempt also upon the Christian faith and the Christian philosophy and to stir the mental results into the dough of the lived life, the experience of life we discover suddenly quite spontaneously, without advance warning the life entirety. Nothing remains faded out. And it is just this life entirety which happens between both Poles from positively and negatively and the author remains very much anxious, the Christian faith as a mainstay, the life bridge about which we must go everybody, of anchoring and of spicing the life steep path with him of giving him taste so that the life entirety not only eatable remains but our imagination stimulates, us dips into dreams, to us in the morning affectionately with the rose smell of the life to awake kisses. A successful lyric the tape which impresses by his subject variety as well as and above all by his mental depth.