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Article (from a serial) accessible via
URN: urn:nbn:de:0111-pedocs-205162
DOI: 10.25656/01:20516; 10.35468/5828_10
URN: urn:nbn:de:0111-pedocs-205162
DOI: 10.25656/01:20516; 10.35468/5828_10
Title |
The Passion of Richard Schickel: what we expect from war films |
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Author | Haberski, Raymond J. |
Source | Zumhof, Tim [Hrsg.]; Johnson, Nicholas K. [Hrsg.]: Show, don't tell. Education and historical representations on stage and screen in Germany and the USA. Bad Heilbrunn : Verlag Julius Klinkhardt 2020, S. 160-171. - (Studien zur Deutsch-Amerikanischen Bildungsgeschichte / Studies in German-American Educational History) |
Document | full text (675 KB) |
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Keywords (German) | Historische Bildungsforschung; Geschichte <Histor>; Geschichtsdarstellung; Geschichtsbewusstsein; Historisches Denken; Geschichtsbild; Geschichtskultur; Mediengeschichte; Film; Beeinflussung; Unterhaltungsfilm; Drama; Darstellung; Filmwirtschaft; Kino; Kritiker; Filmgeschichte; Kriegsfilm; Weltkrieg II; 20. Jahrhundert; USA |
sub-discipline | History of Education Media Education |
Document type | Article (from a serial) |
ISBN | 978-3-7815-2397-5; 978-3-7815-5828-1; 9783781523975; 9783781558281 |
Language | English |
Year of creation | 2020 |
review status | Peer-Reviewed |
Abstract (English): | This article examines the film historian and critic Richard Schickel’s negative reception of Hollywood war films, particularly William Wyler’s The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). For the author, critics like Richard Schickel miss the mark when they deride war films such as The Best Years of Our Lives as jingoistic and unrealistic lies because they expect too much from the Hollywood dream factory and fall into the trap of casting themselves as crusaders for truth against patriotic propaganda. He argues for a more nuanced approach towards war films which treats audiences with respect instead of as passive consumers unwittingly accepting every fiction Hollywood delivers them. This contribution argues for an acknowledgment of the historical context in which films like The Best Years of Our Lives were made and a more balanced approach for analyzing Hollywood’s depiction of World War II. (DIPF/Orig.) |
is part of: | Show, don't tell. Education and historical representations on stage and screen in Germany and the USA |
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Date of publication | 11.08.2020 |
Citation | Haberski, Raymond J.: The Passion of Richard Schickel: what we expect from war films - In: Zumhof, Tim [Hrsg.]; Johnson, Nicholas K. [Hrsg.]: Show, don't tell. Education and historical representations on stage and screen in Germany and the USA. Bad Heilbrunn : Verlag Julius Klinkhardt 2020, S. 160-171. - (Studien zur Deutsch-Amerikanischen Bildungsgeschichte / Studies in German-American Educational History) - URN: urn:nbn:de:0111-pedocs-205162 - DOI: 10.25656/01:20516; 10.35468/5828_10 |