
Antifascism and the Avant-Garde: Radical Documentary in the 1960s - Paperback
Antifascism and the Avant-Garde: Radical Documentary in the 1960s - Paperback
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by Julia Alekseyeva (Author)
Leftist filmmakers of the 1960s revolutionized the art of documentary. Often inspired by the radical art of the Soviet 1920s, filmmakers in countries like France and Japan dared to make film form a powerful weapon in the fight against fascism, weaving fiction into nonfiction and surrealism with neorealism to rupture everyday ways of being, seeing, and thinking. Through careful readings of Matsumoto Toshio, Jean-Luc Godard, Chris Marker, Agn?s Varda, Hani Susumu, and others, Julia Alekseyeva shows that avant-garde documentary films of the 1960s did not strive to inoculate the viewer with the ideology of Truth but instead aimed to unveil and estrange, so that viewers might approach capitalist, imperialist, and fascist media with critical awareness. Antifascism and the Avant-Garde thus provides a transnational ecology of antifascist art that resonates profoundly with our current age.
Back Jacket
Sweeping in scope, Antifascism and the Avant-Garde is a major contribution to both film studies and fascism studies. Julia Alekseyeva is singularly positioned to undertake a comparative study that moves with ease between decolonizing France, postimperial Japan, and the Soviet Union. Her insightful analysis reveals how filmmakers of the antifascist avant-garde undertook formal experiments and created affective atmospheres that subverted the positivism and rationality of traditional documentary, grounding their work in an understanding of the relationship between aesthetics and politics, between perception and antifascist consciousness.--Jackie Wang, author of Carceral Capitalism
"As the clouds of right-wing populism gather on the horizon of late capitalism, Alekseyeva's brilliant and accessible study of experimental documentary filmmaking deftly argues for the value of art that celebrates ambiguity and uncertainty while simultaneously nurturing the militant optimism necessary to carry on the fight for justice."--Kristen R. Ghodsee, author of Everyday Utopia: What 2,000 Years of Bold Experiments Can Teach Us about the Good Life
"Antifascism and the Avant-Garde explores the important and timely question of antifascist aesthetics--how antifascism can look and how it can operate. From a deep grounding in French and Japanese documentary film of the 1960s, Alekseyeva weaves a fascinating picture of echoes, resonances, and conflicts among filmmakers concerned with the use of cinema to counter fascism."--Jennifer Coates, author of Film Viewing in Postwar Japan, 1945-1968: An Ethnographic Study
"A tour de force of genuinely global film studies. Alekseyeva maps out a fascinating net of site-specific but deeply interconnected cinematic quests for radical media literacy that spans the Soviet Union, Japan, and France--quests that only gain more burning significance in our current media situation. Astonishing in its breadth, and essential reading for anyone truly invested in global film dynamics."--Alexander Zahlten, author of The End of Japanese Cinema: Industrial Genres, National Times, and Media Ecologies
Author Biography
Julia Alekseyeva is Assistant Professor of English and Cinema & Media Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and author-illustrator of the award-winning graphic memoir Soviet Daughter: A Graphic Revolution.



















