Reviews
Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
A well-researched, original argument. These case studies tell a fascinating story of how and why our current ways of seeing have evolved over time. Any scholar of the visual (specifically of film, television, and architecture) will want to read this book, whether or not they have studied or have current interest in Germany. It should also be required reading for students of German cultural studies—it’s a different Germany we feel we know after reading the particular synthesis and getting to know the historical characters Koepnick brings together.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Framing Attention
1. Menzel's Rear Window
2. Richard Wagner and the Framing of Modern Empathy
3. Early Cinema and the Windows of Empire
4. Underground Visions
5. Windows 33/45
6
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Framing Attention
1. Menzel's Rear Window
2. Richard Wagner and the Framing of Modern Empathy
3. Early Cinema and the Windows of Empire
4. Underground Visions
5. Windows 33/45
6. Fluxus Television
7. The Nation's New Windows
Epilogue: "Berliner Fenster"
Notes
Index