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German Expressionism
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Films

Introduction

The term Expressionism was coined at the beginning of the 20th century to describe a style of painting that reacted violently against late 19th-century naturalism and Impressionism. Applied to the theatre, it represented a protest against the existing social order. Initially it was concerned with spirit rather than with matter, and typically it sought to get to the essence of the subject by grossly distorting outward appearance or external reality. This “subjective” first phase of Expressionism began in Germany about 1910, though its forerunners had appeared earlier in the plays of Wedekind and in Strindberg’s Ett drömspel, which put realistic drama onto a supernatural plane. The leading exponent of early Expressionism in Germany was Georg Kaiser, whose themes centred on the struggle of the individual to find fulfillment in a hostile civilization. After World War I, the movement gained momentum from the social and political upheaval into which Germany was plunged. This later “activist” phase became more directly political and was represented by the plays of Ernst Toller, which called for a socialist revolution. Die Maschinenstürmer (1922; The Machine Wreckers) is Toller’s best-known play.

(Encyclopedia Brittanica, 2015)

The Great Rebel Filmmakers - Around the World

Cousins, M. (Director). (2011, September). 1918 - 1932: The great rebel filmmakers - around the world [Television Series]. London, United Kingdom: Channel Four

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History

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