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Full Description
Greek Cinema and Migration provides a response to urgent calls to comprehend the cultural impact of immigration in Greece, and to determine the capacity of contemporary Greek cinema to challenge the logic of Fortress Europe. Placing contemporary Greek cinema within the context of European film production and transnational cinema, the book explores the fascination of Greek filmmakers with migration, mobility, borders and identity, between 1991 and 2016. With case studies of films such as The Suspended Step of the Stork (1991), The Way to the West (2003), Man at Sea (2011) and many more, this ground-breaking book provides an in-depth understanding of contemporary Greek cinema and its direct correlation to the country's ongoing struggles to implement European modernity.
Contents
Introduction
1: Looking across (Greco-Albanian) borders: diasporic, migrant and supranational filmmaking
2: The anxieties of transnationalism
3: En route to Fortress Europe: migration and exilic life in Roadblocks
4: Tragic pathos and border syndrome: Constantine Giannaris's Hostage
5: Neither 'good' nor 'bad': Reinventing Albanian identities in Eduart and Mirupafshim
6: Others/mirrors
7: Our own people? Repatriation, citizenship, belonging
8: Migration without a face
9: Documenting crises: raising awareness through documentary film
Bibliography