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The Golem, How He Came into the World
Paperback

The Golem, How He Came into the World

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Actor and director Paul Wegener released his 1920 silent film The Golem, How He Came into the World in the aftermath of Germany’s defeat in World War I. The film’s innovative cinematography, lighting effects, modernist architectural design, and thrilling plot all led contemporaneous viewers and critics to pronounce that Germany had finally succeeded on the film front if not on the battlefield. The Golem, How He Came into the World, Wegener’s third golem film, narrates how Rabbi Loew, here an astrologer and sorcerer as well as a spiritual leader, forms and animates an artificial clay anthropoid in order to save the Prague Jewish community from an edict of expulsion. Maya Barzilai situates the 1920 film in the historical and social context of post-World War I Germany, taking into consideration Wegener’s violent and traumatic service on the Western front. She closely analyzes the film’s expressive sculptural aesthetic, enhanced through poetic cinematography, arguing that Wegener’s animation of cinema also served a postwar ethical purpose: revealing the human face of the golem and offering a redemptive escape from the the film’s Christian-Jewish conflict through nature on the one hand and Zionism on the other.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United States
Date
15 September 2020
Pages
86
ISBN
9781640140301

Actor and director Paul Wegener released his 1920 silent film The Golem, How He Came into the World in the aftermath of Germany’s defeat in World War I. The film’s innovative cinematography, lighting effects, modernist architectural design, and thrilling plot all led contemporaneous viewers and critics to pronounce that Germany had finally succeeded on the film front if not on the battlefield. The Golem, How He Came into the World, Wegener’s third golem film, narrates how Rabbi Loew, here an astrologer and sorcerer as well as a spiritual leader, forms and animates an artificial clay anthropoid in order to save the Prague Jewish community from an edict of expulsion. Maya Barzilai situates the 1920 film in the historical and social context of post-World War I Germany, taking into consideration Wegener’s violent and traumatic service on the Western front. She closely analyzes the film’s expressive sculptural aesthetic, enhanced through poetic cinematography, arguing that Wegener’s animation of cinema also served a postwar ethical purpose: revealing the human face of the golem and offering a redemptive escape from the the film’s Christian-Jewish conflict through nature on the one hand and Zionism on the other.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United States
Date
15 September 2020
Pages
86
ISBN
9781640140301