The Habsburg Monarchy disappeared in 1918, but many elements of its urban culture survived and even continued to evolve in the years to follow. In popular cinema of the interwar period, we can pick up what Nancy Condee has called, in other contexts, an "imperial trace" and begin to map out a common cultural space that continued to bridge the former twin seats of empire, Vienna and Budapest. For this talk, I will focus on three titles -- Frühjahrsparade (1934), Ernte/Die Julika (1936), and Maria Ilona (1939) -- helmed by Géza von Bolváry, one of the most prolific directors of the period. These films point the way toward a "post-imperial" cinema that both re-enacted and re-imagined the relationship between the Austrian and Hungarian halves of the vanished Dual Monarchy.
Csárdás in ¾ Time: The Post-Imperial Cinema World in Interwar Austria and Hungary
Activity Type:
Lecture
Presenter:
Andrew Behrendt, Ph.D. Student, Department of History
Date:
Wednesday, September 19, 2012 - 12:00 to 13:30
Event Status:
As Scheduled
Location:
4217 Posvar Hall
Contact Person:
Anna Talone
Contact Phone:
87407
Contact Email:
crees@pitt.edu
Cost:
Free
UCIS Unit:
Center for Russian East European and Eurasian Studies
European Studies Center
Non-University Sponsors:
Department of History
World Regions:
Europe
Russia/Eastern Europe
Western Europe