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From 1939 to 1950, Slovak cinema underwent a massive institutional development, war-related setbacks, and finally became nationalized under the control of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Information. This article aims to thematize this... more
From 1939 to 1950, Slovak cinema underwent a massive institutional development, war-related setbacks, and finally became nationalized under the control of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Information. This article aims to thematize this understudied time period of Slovak cinema and to reveal how Slovak cinema transformed from a proto-national cinema into a national one.
Research Interests:
The Department of Cinema Studies at Charles University in Prague, in connection with the University of Southampton (United Kingdom), would like to invite you to the second annual Contemporary Central and South-East European Cinema in... more
The Department of Cinema Studies at Charles University in Prague, in connection with the University of Southampton (United Kingdom), would like to invite you to the second annual Contemporary Central and South-East European Cinema in Transition Post-Graduate Conference, taking place in Prague, on 4th and 5th June 2015. The theme of this year’s
conference is “Space in Two Dimensions: Exploring the Concept of Space in the Visual Cultures of Central and Eastern Europe”.
Research Interests: