Cover image for Television, Tabloids, and Tears : Fassbinder and Popular Culture.
Television, Tabloids, and Tears : Fassbinder and Popular Culture.
Title:
Television, Tabloids, and Tears : Fassbinder and Popular Culture.
Author:
Shattuc, Jane.
ISBN:
9780816685950
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (273 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 The Melodrama of Fassbinder's Reception -- 2 Engineering a Democracy through Autorenfilm: The Political Context of Television's Support of Fassbinder -- 3 Fassbinder as a Popular Auteur: The Making of an Authorial Legend -- 4 Shock Pop: Fassbinder and the Aesthetics of the German Counterculture -- 5 The Textual Fassbinder: Two Institutional Genres -- 6 Berlin Alexanderplatz: The Interplay of Fassbinder's Textual Voices -- 7 The Popular Reception of Berlin Alexanderplatz -- 8 Conclusion -- Works -- Appendixes -- Appendix A -- Appendix B -- Appendix C -- Appendix D -- Appendix E -- Appendix F -- Appendix G -- Appendix H -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z.
Abstract:
I am Biberkopf, Rainer Werner Fassbinder declared, aligning himself with the protagonist of his widely seen television adaptation of Berlin Alexanderplatz. The statement provoked an unprecedented national debate about what constituted an acceptable German artist and who has the power to determine art. More than any recent German director, Fassbinder embodied this debate, and Jane Shattuc shows us how much this can tell us, not just about the man and his work, but also about the state of "culture" in Germany. It is fascinating in itself that Fassbinder, a highly controversial public figure, was chosen to direct Berlin Alexanderplatz, Germany's longest, costliest, and most widely viewed television drama. Shattuc exposes the dichotomy of institutional support for this project versus the scandalous controversial reputation of Fassbinder as a gay man who flaunted his sexuality and involvement with drugs. Fassbinder built his reputation on two separate images of the director-the faithful adapter and the underground star; with Berlin Alexanderplatz these two identities came together explosively. Tracing the two artistic paths that led Fassbinder to this moment, Shattuc offers us a look at cultural class divisions in Germany. Her account of Fassbinder's history as an Autor reveals both the triumph and the failure of bourgeois cultural domination in postwar West Germany.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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