Description
About the Author
BRAD PRAGER is Associate Professor of German at the University of Missouri, Columbia.
Reviews
[This book] made a big impression on me. The author sets off on a search for... filmic influences on the director Christian Petzold and his co-author Harun Farocki... . [R]eads suspensefully and enhances one's perception of Christian Petzold's film. * HHPRINZLER.DE *
[Prager's book] serves as a well-informed introduction to the complex system of cultural references in the film and as an inspiration for further analyses (beyond the context of the Berlin School). -- Eileen Rositzka * FILMBLATT *
There is no question: in Brad Prager Phoenix has found an ideal interpreter. . . . With crystal-clear argumentation, Prager's splendidly written book shows that this is . . . a very good film, and possibly one of Petzold's best. . . . Prager's book, first-rate in every respect, delivers an outstanding argument for the film having a firm place in the cinematic canon of the Federal Republic. -- Joern Glasenapp * MEDIENwissenschaft *
Prager's analysis of Phoenix leaves no stone unturned. . . . . [He] simultaneously unpacks key scenes throughout the film and highlights compelling parallels between Phoenix and other films that inspired [it]. -- Jeanne Schueller * MONATSHEFTE *
Brad Prager's deep engagement with Christian Petzold's Phoenix situates the film within a broader emigre and exile tradition surrounding the examination of postwar German and German-Jewish identity and engaging with Germany's Nazi past. . . . Prager takes pains to connect Petzold and [his collaborator Harun] Farocki's work with the specifically German-Jewish work that informs it. He shows readers how they intersect thematically and aesthetically and emphasizes the meaning and nuance these other works bring to the film. -- Noah Soltau * GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW *
Book Information
ISBN 9781640140387
Author Professor Brad Prager
Format Paperback
Page Count 88
Imprint Camden House Inc
Publisher Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Series Camden House German Film Classics