Postwar German Cinema and the Horror Film - Scarecrow Press
Postwar German Cinema and the Horror Film - Scarecrow Press
Postwar German Cinema and the Horror Film - Scarecrow Press
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
xxiv Steffen Hantke<br />
Works Cited<br />
Elsaesser, Thomas. Weimar <strong>Cinema</strong> <strong>and</strong> After: <strong>German</strong>y’s Historical Imaginary.<br />
London/New York: Routledge, 2000.<br />
Geschichte des deutschen <strong>Film</strong>s. Eds. Wolfgang Jacobsen, Anton Kaes, <strong>and</strong> Hans<br />
Helmut Prinzler. Stuttgart/Weimar: Metzler, 1993.<br />
Greco, Joseph. The File on Robert Siodmak in Hollywood, 1941–1951. Dissertation.com,<br />
USA 1999.<br />
Hake, Sabine. Popular <strong>Cinema</strong> of <strong>the</strong> Third Reich. Austin: Texas University <strong>Press</strong>, 2001.<br />
———. <strong>German</strong> National <strong>Cinema</strong>. London/New York: Routledge, 2002.<br />
Hanke, Ken. “The ‘lost horror film’ series: <strong>the</strong> Edgar Wallace krimis.” Fear Without<br />
Frontiers: <strong>Horror</strong> <strong>Cinema</strong> Across <strong>the</strong> Globe. Ed. Steven J. Schneider. Go-<br />
dalming: FAB <strong>Press</strong>, 2003. 111–23.<br />
Humphries, Reynold. The American <strong>Horror</strong> <strong>Film</strong>: An Introduction. Edinburgh: Edin-<br />
burgh University <strong>Press</strong>, 2002.<br />
Hutchings, Peter. The <strong>Horror</strong> <strong>Film</strong>. Harlow: Longman, 2004.<br />
Jancovich, Mark. “General Introduction.” <strong>Horror</strong>, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Film</strong> Reader. Ed. Mark Jancovich.<br />
Routledge <strong>Film</strong> Readers, Eds. Steven Cohan <strong>and</strong> Ina Rae Hark. London/New<br />
York: Routledge, 2002. 1–21.<br />
Jones, Darryl. <strong>Horror</strong>: A Thematic History in Fiction <strong>and</strong> <strong>Film</strong>. London: Arnold, 2002.<br />
King, Claire Sisco. “Imaging <strong>the</strong> Abject: The Ideological Use of <strong>the</strong> Dissolve.” <strong>Horror</strong><br />
<strong>Film</strong>: Creating <strong>and</strong> Marketing Fear. Ed. Steffen Hantke. Jackson: University<br />
<strong>Press</strong> of Mississippi, 2004.<br />
Koepnick. Lutz. The Dark Mirror: <strong>German</strong> <strong>Cinema</strong> between Hitler <strong>and</strong> Hollywood.<br />
Berkeley: University of California <strong>Press</strong>, 2002.<br />
Kreimeier, Klaus. The Ufa Story: A History of <strong>German</strong>y’s Greatest <strong>Film</strong> Company,<br />
1918–1945. 1992. Transl. Robert <strong>and</strong> Rita Kimber. Berkeley: University of<br />
California <strong>Press</strong>, 1999.<br />
Halle, R<strong>and</strong>all. “Unification <strong>Horror</strong>: Queer Desire <strong>and</strong> Uncanny Visions.” Light Motives:<br />
<strong>German</strong> Popular <strong>Film</strong> in Perspective. Eds. R<strong>and</strong>all Halle <strong>and</strong> Margaret<br />
McCarthy. Detroit: Wayne State University <strong>Press</strong>, 2003. 281–304.<br />
Larsen, Henrik. “‘No <strong>Horror</strong> <strong>Film</strong>s! We’re <strong>German</strong>!’: A Conversation Between Henrik<br />
Larsen <strong>and</strong> Harald Gruenberger.” 2001. Accessed on August 15, 2005.<br />
www.cultmovies.dk /obskur/winnetou.htm.<br />
Maddrey, Joseph. Nightmares in Red, White <strong>and</strong> Blue: The Evolution of <strong>the</strong> American<br />
<strong>Horror</strong> <strong>Film</strong>. Jefferson, NC, <strong>and</strong> London: McFarl<strong>and</strong>, 2004.<br />
Prawer, Siegbert Saloman. Caligari’s Children: The <strong>Film</strong> as Tale of Terror. New York:<br />
DaCapo <strong>Press</strong>, 1989.<br />
Rentschler, Eric. The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi <strong>Cinema</strong> <strong>and</strong> Its Afterlife. Cambridge:<br />
Harvard University <strong>Press</strong>, 1996.<br />
Santner, Eric L. Str<strong>and</strong>ed Objects: Mourning, Memory, <strong>and</strong> <strong>Film</strong> in <strong>Postwar</strong> <strong>German</strong>y.<br />
Ithaca/London: Cornell University <strong>Press</strong>, 1990.<br />
Skal, David. The Monster Show: A Cultural History of <strong>Horror</strong>. New York: Norton, 1993.<br />
Twitchell, James B. Dreadful Pleasures: An Anatomy of Modern <strong>Horror</strong>. NewYork/Oxford:<br />
Oxford University <strong>Press</strong>, 1985.