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Screen as Battlefield

Confronting the Past in New Polish Cinema

Screen as Battlefield cover

Screen as Battlefield

Confronting the Past in New Polish Cinema

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Pre-order. Available Dec 24 2026
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Description

Screen as Battlefield deals with the treatment of history in Polish cinema after the end of communist rule in 1989 and the return of democracy.

It analyzes not only how local filmmakers have represented the last century's complex history, but also how various government institutions have tried to influence the cinematic vision of the past through funding (or the lack of it) and by using political pressure.

The year 1989 was as a turning point in Polish history, marking the peaceful transition from a totalitarian system to democracy. After years of mythologizing history, Polish past was finally present on Polish screens. Previously banned or available only in censored versions, historical subjects became prominent in cinema theatres and on television. These topics have included, among others, the Soviet-Nazi pact and aggression on Poland in 1939, the Soviet occupation of the entire region after 1945, the brutal imposition of communist rule, and the Stalinist legacy. Since the founding of the Polish Film Institute (PISF) in 2005, more than one hundred theatrically released films have dealt with Polish history. Several of them received international acclaim and festival awards; they were also popular at the box office. Screen as Battlefield discusses several internationally known films, among them The Pianist (2002), Katyn (2006), Rose (2011), Ida (2013), Warsaw '44 (2014), Volhynia (aka Hatred, 2016), and Cold War (2018).

Table of Contents

Introduction: History, Memory, and Politics in Polish Cinema
1. Film Industry in Poland after the Wall Came Down and the Importance of History
2. Double Memory: New Films about the Holocaust
3. New Commemorations of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising
4. Between Hitler and Stalin: Cinematic Representations of Central Europe as “Bloodlands”
5. The Return of Communist Past as a Genre Film
6. The Return of History as a Biopic
7. The Polish Communist Apparatus on Screen
8. “Patriotic Pictures”: Polish Cinema and the Restoration of the Polish State in 1918
9. Great Fear: Representations of Post-War Years
10. Private Memories of Underdevelopment: Communist Nostalgia?
11. The Cinematic Afterlife of the Polish People's Republic (PRL)
Filmography
Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Dec 24 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Pages 256
ISBN 9781501382772
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Illustrations 30 bw illus
Dimensions 229 x 152 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Marek Haltof

Marek Haltof is the author of twelve books, includ…

Author

Piotr Zwierzchowski

Piotr Zwierzchowski, published several books in Po…

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