Sergei M. Eisenstein: Notes for a General History of Cinema

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Naum Kleiman, Antonio Somaini
Amsterdam University Press, 2016 - Motion pictures - 545 pages
One of the iconic figures of the twentieth-century cinema, Sergei Eisenstein is best known as the director of "The Battleship Potemkin, Alexander Nevskii "and "Ivan the Terrible." His craft as director and film editor left a distinct mark on such key figures of the Western cinema as Nicolas Roeg, Francis Ford Coppola, Sam Peckinpah and Akiro Kurosawa. This comprehensive volume is the first-ever English-language edition of Eisenstein s newly discovered notes for a general history of the cinema, a project he undertook in 1946-47 before his death in 1948. In his writings, Eisenstein presents the main coordinates of a history of the cinema without mentioning specific directors or films: what we find instead is a vast genealogy of all the media and of all the art forms that have preceded cinema s birth and accompanied the first decades of its history, exploring the same expressive possibilities that cinema has explored and responding to the same, deeply rooted, urges that cinema has responded to. Eisenstein s texts are followed by a commentary by some of the world s experts on the Russian cinema."

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About the author (2016)

Naum Kleiman is director of the Film Museum in Moscow, director of the Eisenstein Center, and editor of the Russian editions of some of Eisenstein's most important theoretical works. Antonio Somaini is professor of film and visual culture studies at the Universit Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3.


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