Far-Flung Families in Film, 9780748642908
Hardcover
This book fills this gap and provides an essential resource for academics and researchers with an interest in cinematic representations of the family and transnational cinema.

Far-Flung Families in Film

The Diasporic Family in Contemporary European Cinema

$306.92

  • Hardcover

    224 pages

  • Release Date

    20 August 2013

Check Delivery Options

Summary

In the age of globalisation, diasporic and other types of transnational family are increasingly represented across the film spectrum in works such as Bend It Like Beckham, The Namesake, Boys ‘n the Hood, Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (The Brave Heart Will Take the Bride) and My Big Fat Greek Wedding. While there is a significant body of scholarship on the representation of the family in Hollywood cinema, an analysis of the depiction of the diasporic family in cinema from a comparative transn…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780748642908
ISBN-10:0748642900
Author:Daniela Berghahn
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:Edinburgh University Press
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:224
Release Date:20 August 2013
Weight:518g
Dimensions:234mm x 156mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Daniela Berghahn provides a timely, wide-ranging, and engaging analysis of diasporic family films made by key directors from around the world living in Europe and identifies a new European cinema in the new multicultural Europe. * Hamid Naficy, author of An Accented Cinema: Exilic and Diasporic Filmmaking *‘Berghahn’s engaging style, the range of her material and the depth of analysis make this a refreshing contribution to the field. This is a fascinating and timely volume which will appeal to academics, but ought also to reach a wider audience interested in contemporary cinema.’ – Alexandra Lloyd, University of Oxford * Journal of Contemporary European Studies *‘Daniela Berghahn exhibits here her characteristic ability to provide an overview of a large and complicated topic with clarity, theoretical insight, and scholarly erudition. In five chapters plus an introduction, Berghahn discusses the development of a genre that is interconnected with the history of labor migration, asylum, and exile…Its multilingual bibliography is itself an excellent tool to foster transnational and truly European models of research. The clarity of writing style and the breadth of the discussion make it appropriate for multiple levels, including the undergraduate classroom.’ – Randall Halle * Monatshefte *‘Berghahn’s monograph offers a valuable contribution to the field of transnational European film studies. Furthermore, having enjoyed the resources offered by an AHRC grant, it benefits from a very useful companion website (farflungfamilies.net) that offers additional material on the films discussed, as well as related podcasts and information. This not only facilitates further its pedagogic use, but also allows it to circulate even more widely and transnationally than the book itself, potentially having an impact not only on further academic studies of diasporic cinema but also on the filmmaking community itself, inspiring the production and circulation of ever more films that address crosscultural themes and issues.’ – Lydia Papadimitriou * Screen, 562 Summer 2015 *‘Berghahn’s monograph offers a valuable contribution to the field of transnational European film studies. Furthermore, having enjoyed the resources offered by an AHRC grant, it benefits from a very useful companion website (farflungfamilies.net) that offers additional material on the films discussed, as well as related podcasts and information. This not only facilitates further its pedagogic use, but also allows it to circulate even more widely and transnationally than the book itself, potentially having an impact not only on further academic studies of diasporic cinema but also on the filmmaking community itself, inspiring the production and circulation of ever more films that address crosscultural themes and issues.’ – Lydia Papadimitriou * Screen, 562 Summer 2015 *Far-Flung Families in Film explores the conflicted tensions sustaining its key terms “diasporic” and “family”. Giving full scope to the centrifugal and centripetal forces at work, Daniela Berghahn admirably proves that the “transnational turn” has energized not only filmmakers, but invigorated debate among the academic community as well. * Thomas Elsaesser, author of European Cinema: Face to Face with Hollywood *The beautifully illustrated Far-Flung Families in Film is a milestone in the study of diasporic film and ‘accented cinema’ (Hamid Naficy), and it also marks a particularly original and much-needed contribution to transnational cinema studies. I would warmly recommend Daniela Berghahn’s book to scholars, students, makers, promoters and critics of film as well as to learned cinema-goers. – Márta Minier, University of South Wales * Transnational Cinemas *‘The beautifully illustrated Far-Flung Families in Film is a milestone in the study of diasporic film and ‘accented cinema’ (Hamid Naficy), and it also marks a particularly original and much-needed contribution to transnational cinema studies. I would warmly recommend Daniela Berghahn’s book to scholars, students, makers, promoters and critics of film as well as to learned cinema-goers.’ – Márta Minier, University of South Wales * Transnational Cinemas *

About The Author

Daniela Berghahn

Daniela Berghahn is Professor of Film Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London. She has published widely in the areas of migrant and diasporic cinema, transnational cinema and post-war German cinema and culture. Her books include Head On (2015), Far-Flung Families in Film: The Diasporic Family in Contemporary European Cinema (EUP 2013), European Cinema in Motion: Migrant and Diasporic Film in Contemporary Europe (2010) and Hollywood Behind the Wall: The Cinema of East Germany (2005).

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.