Field Reports

March 2, 2016 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

“Field Reports” will approach modernisms as local responses to a capitalist and colonialist modernity as it voraciously expands all over the globe. Our blog posts will focus on a wide range of languages, nations, and regions, illuminating a global, interconnected, and uneven reality as well as the varied responses that arise in relation to it. Aimed at a non-specialist audience, individual posts might introduce tribal and indigenous poetry, protest literatures, a newly discovered archive, a recent cluster of groundbreaking articles or books, climate fiction novels, an art exhibition visited, or a major translation.

January 14, 2026 By: Amit Baishya

Anglophone Literature from the borderland region of Northeast India has a relatively short history with the major works comprising the oeuvre published in the last four decades or so. One of the most visible trajectories in Northeast Indian Anglophone Literature (NIAL) [1] is the reworking of myths and origin stories, especially by writers from indigenous communities. [2] NIAL writers weave myths to explore both deep pasts and contemporary conundrums about community and political identity...

May 28, 2025 By: Huda Fakhreddine

It is the twentieth month of genocide, our planet’s second rotation around the sun, drenched in Palestinian blood, 600 days of Palestinian slaughter, and nothing is new except the finality of the massacre. The world has sacrificed the Palestinians with its complicity and silence, and it will soon start rehabilitating itself by erecting monuments of guilt, reciting land acknowledgements, mythologizing the Palestinian, and cannibalizing the myth. Given the scale of this historic calamity, the...

May 21, 2025 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

Understanding that modernity is always already global and colonial informs how Field Reports approaches modernism. Modernist studies is inevitably a comparative project because modernity has a shared material ground of an ever-expanding colonial-capitalism that traverses and connects the globe but that nevertheless manifests differently in singular locations. Colonial-capitalism produces a world-spanning interrelated singularity that renders the Anglophone world, including its imperial centers...

October 12, 2021 By: Katarzyna Bartoszyńska

I’m sitting on my parents’ couch, working on the translation of an archival text by the Polish sociologist, Zygmunt Bauman, who is most famous, perhaps, for his work on “liquid modernity” and globalization. Though much of his writing was in English, this is one of his earlier works, entitled On Frustration and Conjurers, about the events that took place in Poland in March, 1968—the student uprisings and anti-Semitic propaganda campaign—and there is a discussion of the situation of the working...

August 26, 2021 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

My final words of advice to you are educate, agitate and organize; have faith in yourself. With justice on our side I do not see how we can lose our battle. The battle to me is a matter of joy. The battle is in the fullest sense spiritual. There is nothing material or social in it. For ours is a battle not for wealth or for power. It is battle for freedom. It is the battle of reclamation of human personality. [1] B. R. Ambedkar In the introduction to their graphic novel Bhimayana: Incidents in...

October 22, 2020 By: Marijeta Bozovic

From its contested origins in Germany’s Black Forest to the Black Sea, Europe’s second longest river connects ten countries and its watershed four more. Navigable along the entire route, the Danube river serves as the artery and border of a diverse geographic region, and frustrates attempts to divide Europe from non-Europe even as it facilitates the flow of transnational environmental, economic, and cultural exchange. Diversity along the Danube has long eluded stable political arrangement; nor...

February 19, 2020 By: Simon van Schalkwyk

The specter of modernism has haunted South African culture for quite some time. In Katharine Kilalea’s recent novel, O.K. Mr. Field (2018), it takes the form of “the House for the Study of Water,” a replica of Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye, transplanted from its original setting in Poissy, France, to the coastal cliffs of South Africa’s Cape Peninsula. [1] After an accident that leaves him unable to continue his career as a concert pianist, Field purchases the Villa from Hannah Kallenbach, the widow of Jan Kallenbach who, in the imaginary world of Kilalea’s novel, was a disciple of Le Corbusier (Kilalea Field, 4-5). It is worth noting, however, that the name “Kallenbach” suggestively recalls one of the leading figures of South African architectural modernism: Hermann Kallenbach, described by Loren Kruger as “friend of Ghandi and heir of German modernism.” [2] Modernism, in other words, is the motor that drives the novelistic machinery of Kilalea’s O. K. Mr. Field.

October 25, 2019 By: Jeanne-Marie Jackson

In the introduction to his superb book Realism after Modernism, Devin Fore describes a “shared modernist aspiration to achieve conditions of perception and consciousness outside of what is customarily arrogated to the human.” [1] He sees this as the tie that binds avant-garde movements across early twentieth-century Europe: from José Ortega y Gasset to Jean-François Lyotard, Paul Cezanne to Velimir Khlebnikov, modernism was a radically diverse enterprise with an eye to the aesthetic...

August 14, 2019 By: Jacob Edmond

What is this thing called modernist studies? And what does it look like when viewed from the—for most—faraway islands of Aotearoa/New Zealand? A Bird’s-Eye View Such a shift in perspective, I want to suggest, can prompt a new way of writing and thinking about modernism. Modernism itself is full of such shifts in perspective, of course. Think, for example, of the radical new poetic forms that Futurists such as Vasily Kamensky and F. T. Marinetti produced in response to the invention of the...

April 22, 2019 By: Jeanne-Marie Jackson

Those of us who work in traditions considered “global” within US and, to varying degrees, European academies are often pulled in two professional directions. On the one hand, many of us feel rightly accountable to a kind of work most welcome in area studies: granular, situated, concerned with historical depth over what can feel like untenable generalization. On the other, we feel the sting of exclusion from the field’s “big” conversations, and seek broad conceptual discussion of “the literary,” as such. Both impulses—as an Africanist, I think here of toggling between the African Studies Association and the MLA—have value. In the effort to entrench a globally conscientious modernism, though, I find their differences hard to split. Terms like “global modernity” often feel removed from the lives and locales that anchor aesthetic practices beyond a few transnational publishing houses. Neither an historically intertwined (whether network-based or world-systematic) nor a discrete, comparative approach to global modernist method feels quite right, and yet the challenge to find something that does (to modernists, at least) is perennially cast as urgent. Job and book titles aside, I have grown to see Global Northern takes on the “global” even within the “global Anglophone” field as an over-beat drum, stemming as they often do from a form of what Modernism/modernity readers might recognize as “ weak theory.” As David Ayers has written in his reponse to the Modernism/modernity special issue on weak theory, there is only so much one can do to inclusivize an exclusive position, which, like a maximally expansive modernism, “simultaneously claims and renounces its universality.

January 23, 2019 By: Rachel Price

Three recent New York exhibitions highlight Latin American and Caribbean culture, crossing contemporary art and anthropology: Pacha, Llaqta, Wasichay: Indigenous Space, Modern Architecture, New Art (Whitney Museum of American Art, July 2018–September 2018); Taíno: Native Heritage and Identity in the Caribbean (National Museum of the American Indian, July 2018–October 2019), and Lydia Cabrera and Édouard Glissant: Trembling Thinking (Americas Society, October 2018–January 2019). The first two...

April 26, 2018 By: Maite Conde

Turn-of-the-century Rio de Janeiro: this period was a time of radical changes for what was then Brazil’s capital. These changes intended to make the city Brazil’s “capital of the twentieth century” (to paraphrase Walter Benjamin). Rio’s transformations were part of broader changes taking place in the country. In 1888 slavery had been abolished in Brazil, followed a year later by the ousting of the imperial family. These events marked the start of the First Republic (1889-1930) and signaled a new era for the country. Once in power, the Republican government set out to reinvent the country’s identity. The former colony’s peripheral character was to be a thing of the past. Incorporating European imperial ideas that promoted universal values of civilization and progress, the elite turned its back on Brazil’s rural, slave-holding history to rewrite its identity as a modern nation-state, a nation of order and progress, as the new flag announced–one equal to any other on the Western world.

December 17, 2017 By: Sanja Bahun

Cushioned in an archival box in the Museum of Applied Arts, Belgrade, Serbia, lies a remarkable surrealist photograph: Nikola Vučo’s The Arrested Flight of Surreality ( Zadržano bekstvo nadstvarnosti, 1929, fig. 1). Posing as a visual riddle, the photograph shows the figure of a woman with her back to the viewer, as if intent on moving on, or fleeing, and the semitransparent hands arresting her flight or gently pulling her in the opposite direction. The surreal effects of the photograph result from double exposure, considered an innovative technique at the time, wherein superimposition is obtained by apparatic means rather than interventions on the negative. Dual exposure photographs have to be premeditated and carefully staged performances, thus presenting great examples of what Pavle Levi has called “ cinema by other means.”

March 15, 2017 By: Andrew van der Vlies

In the final room of Thick Time, the William Kentridge show recently on at the Whitechapel Gallery in London, viewers encountered yet another of the installation environments those familiar with the South African artist’s work have come to expect from this fascinating—mercurial, polymath—contemporary global art-maker. [1] We imagine we are in a room in a villa near the sea. On one wall, a demagogue gesticulates in vintage newsreel footage, addressing an audience in French (apparently an international gathering of socialists), while disappearing slowly from view as water rises to obscure all but the English subtitles.

February 8, 2017 By: Anneka Lenssen

“Well this exhibition feels a little too timely,” my colleague Clare Davies posted to Facebook during a November 21, 2016 visit to Art et liberté: Rupture, guerre et surréalisme en Egypte (1938-1948) at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. The exhibit—a major contribution to contemporary

October 15, 2016 By: Kate Baldwin

When race is pictured historically, it often is removed from leftist radicalism. (Ellison’s novel Invisible Man is about Harlem in the 1930s, a decade when even middle of the road intellectuals were at their most socialist.) Likewise, when the “American” is imagined, it is at a distance from the mobility of artistic lives, influences and historical factors, including the circuits of Soviet communism (mentioned, briefly, in a sign about “industry and labor” in “After the Fall”).

June 1, 2016 By: Carlos Rojas

It has been between 15,000 and 30,000 years since dogs began living with humans, and although it is appealing to imagine that it was humans who originally domesticated man’s best friend, it is actually more likely that the ancestors of modern dogs effectively domesticated themselves—finding it evolutionarily advantageous to adopt behaviors that would permit them to live symbiotically with early humans, from whom they could then obtain food and protection. Similarly, chickens were apparently first domesticated in China about 10,000 years, but for much of that time they were used primarily for symbolic and social purposes, and the earliest evidence we have that they were being consumed in large numbers dates back only about 2,200 years ago.

March 2, 2016 By: Christopher Bush

The study of literary modernism has expanded so dramatically over the past few decades that I’ve heard more than one colleague ask in exasperation, “Well, then, what isn’t modernism?” As Stephen Colbert might ask: is this a great problem to have . . . or the greatest? Almost certainly the latter, but even so, such dynamism and growth bring challenges: so much to read, compelling us to choose from among the now-dizzying array of possibilities, according to criteria that are themselves subject to change.
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A River Unaligned: The Danube in Film and Cold War

October 22, 2020 By: Marijeta Bozovic

Volume 5 Cycle 2

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From its contested origins in Germany’s Black Forest to the Black Sea, Europe’s second longest river connects ten countries and its watershed four more. Navigable along the entire route, the Danube river serves as the artery and border of a diverse geographic region, and frustrates attempts to divide Europe from non-Europe even as it facilitates the flow of transnational environmental, economic, and cultural exchange. Diversity along the Danube has long eluded stable political arrangement; nor have its peoples easily settled into the fraught category of the nation-state. The forms of the region’s political organization appear painfully transient in the sweep of history during which the river’s flow has remained a rare constant.[1]

From the Romans to the Habsburgs, Ottomans, and Soviets, the Danube has been the site of vast imperial ambitions. In the twentieth century, the river witnessed a hitherto inconceivable marriage of violence and technology during World War I. World War II brought the unimaginable. After 50 years of Cold War and the fall of Second World socialism, the river ran red once more with the fratricidal dissolution of Yugoslavia. In the early 2000s, the European Union claimed to be better suited to the diversity of the world’s smallest continent, but its brutalizing by violent nationalisms continues in the wake of refugee crises and the building of new Berlin walls; Ukraine has become the site of the twenty-first century’s new “Eastern question.”

Yet in Hölderlin’s hymn, this river “is called Ister. It lives in beauty.”[2] Johann Strauss II’s waltz “The Beautiful Blue Danube”—one of the most popular pieces of music in the classical repertoire—was chosen by Stanley Kubrick for 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) to score humanity’s conquest of the cosmos. A symbol of human achievement, the Danube has been endowed with utopian functions across languages and media. Transnational Danubian cinema has been as fascinated with what lies beneath the surface of the photogenic river as in its many reflections. Vienna, one of the Danube’s quintessential cities, was the birthplace of psychoanalysis: below the reflective surface lurk dark histories and unprocessed memories. The Romantic river, now the industrial passageway of the EU, has also served as the “dumping water” for global trash—with all the term’s ominous implications. For while it has been viewed as a metaphorical artery of civilization and an imaginary of world culture, Europe’s river is also a watery grave, as Dragan Kujundžić puts it, for the non-biodegradable.[3]

Over the course of six decades, films from The Third Man (1949) to Oxygen (2010) have pictured the Danube as the quintessential river of the Cold War.[4] Tracing the river’s imaginaries across Cold War cinema—and its revival—reveals the Danube as central to the visual poetics of European “otherness” and to recurrent dreams of a transnational future.[5] Both in turn, I would argue, lie at the beating heart of European modernism(s).

Carol Reed’s 1949 British noir The Third Man, written initially as a novella by screenwriter Graham Greene, follows pulp novelist Holly Martins to Allied-occupied Vienna in search of his old friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles). Greene and Reed based their vision on their own experiences visiting the divided city, incorporating along the way the inspired improvisations of one of the most talented actors of their time. The Third Man visualizes the start of the imminent Cold War underground, far from the recognizable landmarks of the city, setting the tone for countless cultural productions to follow.

Screen shot of The Third Man (London Films, 1949)
Fig. 1. Screen shot of The Third Man (London Films, 1949), directed by Carol Reed.

Upon arrival, Martins learns that Lime has just been killed, and moreover that his old friend had been involved in the worst kind of black marketeering. Nothing is as it seems: Martins learns that an unreported third man was spotted with the body. This unaccounted-for detail launches Martins into the wormhole of his own private investigation. While everyone warns Martins to go home, he persists in his own inquiry into the death, falling for Lime’s mistress Anna Schmidt along the way. Just as the investigating British officer convinces Martins that his friend is better left dead—producing evidence that Lime had been selling diluted antibiotics to hospitals, gruesomely killing men, women, and children for “Seventy pounds a tube”—the man himself rises vampirically out of sewers dumping into the Danube, and in the Soviet-controlled sector of town.[6] The man they had buried was an accomplice turned informer; Lime was the mysterious third man all along.

Reed’s film contrasts several conflicting codes of ethics (or their absence), most centrally in the conflict between the two misplaced Americans. Martins, a writer of Western genre fiction, imagines Vienna as the stage for a showdown between good and evil—with himself first in the role of detective and then as Anna Schmidt’s white-hatted hero. Lime represents a very different kind of American values, recognizing no higher law than personal profit. In the film’s most quoted exchange between the two men atop the Prater Wheel in the Russian sector, Martins asks Lime whether he has seen any of his victims. Lime responds:

You know, I never feel comfortable in these sort of things. Victims? Don't be melodramatic. Look down there. Would you really feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered you £20,000 for every dot that stopped, would you really, old man, tell me to keep my money? Or would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spare? Free of income tax, old man. Free of income tax. It's the only way you can save money nowadays.[7]

Yet there is as much slippage between ideologies in The Third Man as there is liberal use of the famed “Dutch” angles to suggest a world that has been broken apart and poorly thrown back together. (As Roger Ebert puts it: “There are fantastic oblique angles. Wide-angle lenses distort faces and locations. And the bizarre lighting makes the city into an expressionist nightmare.”)[8] While Lime and Martins clearly have a long and shared history of playing by their own rules, Lime’s descent into horrifying hypercapitalism crosses the line of maverick cowboy behavior, and paradoxically appears to have been learned on the wrong side of the river, in the Soviet sector of town, where he has been forced to hide from the (British) law. In his justification-cum-recruitment pitch to Martins, Lime attests that “nobody thinks in terms of human beings. Governments don’t. Why should we? They talk about the people and the proletariat; I talk about the suckers and the mugs. It’s the same thing.”[9]

Lime offers a nightmare version of the mentality of the “other side,” seemingly picking out the worst from each side of the nascent Cold War—combining disregard for individual life with unchecked self-interest. Perhaps it wasn’t exposure to the Soviets that did “poor old Harry” in, but his very ability to navigate two opposing ecosystems and their incompatible moral values. Yet the perspective suggested by the film’s shifting frames also never allows viewers an easy alignment with Martins. From Anton Karas’s underminingly arch zither score (one of the most famous in film history) to Anna’s evident contempt for her would-be rescuer, The Third Man is heaped with clues that Martins fails to understand. Anna, who is from Czechoslovakia, has been living on the right side of the tracks by virtue of a forged Austrian passport from Lime. Although Lime hands over her information to the Soviets for forced repatriation in exchange for his own safe haven, Anna refuses to forget what he has done for her in the past, or to judge. In the very last scene where all three are together—Harry Lime, this time in his casket at his second and final funeral, Holly Martins and Anna Schmidt in attendance—Anna won’t even look at Martins. In her eyes, he is not only responsible for the death of her lover, but is a police informer and hypocrite.

Screen shot of The Third Man (London Films, 1949)
Fig. 2. Screen shot of The Third Man (London Films, 1949), directed by Carol Reed.

Unbeknownst to Anna, Lime’s death signals a rapprochement between the two men’s codes and the penultimate act of Martins’s sentimental education. As the police chase moves underground to the Danubian sewers and ends with a shootout, a wounded Lime motions to his friend to finish him off. The writer of Westerns and would-be Übermensch wordlessly agree that prison is no place for a real man. Yet as many essays and critical reviews as the film has inspired, next to none question that repatriation to Soviet territory is a fate worse than death for a lovely Central European. The Luciferian Lime meanwhile has been compared to Dracula: Bram Stoker’s novel picks up speed precisely when Jonathan Harker crosses the Danube into Transylvania, bringing back evil like a spreading infection when he attempts to return home.[10] Reed and Greene’s vision borrows from a rich tradition of gothic tropes to signal to viewers that while this may be postwar Vienna, the real war has only begun.

I have written elsewhere on David Barison and Daniel Ross’s experimental documentary The Ister (2004), which sets philosophical discussions of Martin Heidegger’s legacy (beginning and ending with his 1942 lecture series on Hölderlin’s hymn) against a journey upstream, from southeastern European landscapes pocked with the signs of recent wars and capitulations, to pass through sites of concentration camps and technological extermination before ending in the lush green Bavaria of the Danube river’s always-already contested origins.[11] 2004 was a watershed year for Europe: a time of NATO expansion, of dramatic European Union ascendancy if not triumph—a much-heralded turning point for a region with a history of violence. From the vantage point of 2020, The Ister already reads as a distant historical document as it follows the Danube River past Romanian celebrations over joining NATO, past the bombed bridges of the former Yugoslavia and new national parades, past the crumbling monuments of state socialism, to the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Austria, the Walhalla Temple, Freiburg University and into Germany’s Black Forest. The optimism of those early years of the twenty-first century proved wildly unfounded.

Serbian-Austrian Goran Rebić’s Donau, Duna, Dunaj, Dunav, Dunarea (2003), a kind of accidental fiction-film companion piece to The Ister, imagines the river as the lifeline and genius loci of a traumatized but healing Europe. Rebić’s film, with its buoyant intimation that the spirit of the Danube might provide new beginnings and idealized multicultural families to the river’s many orphans, reads today as of a particular fleeting moment and fantasy of Europe after the end of history.[12] Goran Rebić’s many-named film tells the story of The Danube riverboat en route to Romania from Vienna. The German captain, Franz, agrees to transport the orphaned Bruno and the coffin of his mother (Franz’s ex-wife), former Romanian Olympic swimmer Mara Popescu back to her home waters. The ship’s crew includes his Ukranian first mate, Giorgi, Serbian engineer, Nikola, and Hungarian cook, Tanja; and soon also Mathilda, a woman of color fleeing a heroin problem in Vienna, and Mircea, a Romanian cowboy who tried to make it west across the river. Along the way, some fall in love, others fall out of love, and new multicultural families are formed. Bruno ends up deposited in Sulina after Franz’s sudden death, with the new knowledge that both have been his adoptive (rather than biological) parents. He remains in Romania with Mara’s welcoming but foreign family, whose language he doesn’t speak, as Giorgi sails the riverboat symbolically on into the Black Sea.

Screen shot of Donau, Dunaj, Duna, Dunav, Dunarea (Lotus Film, 2013)
Fig. 3. Screen shot of Donau, Dunaj, Duna, Dunav, Dunarea (Lotus Film, 2013), directed by Goran Rebic.

The Serbian-Austrian Rebić uses the Danube to tell the stories of international and trans-historical traumas, yet he also clearly casts the river as the lifeline for a number of postnational orphans caught between the memories of Western and Eastern Europe:

Rebić himself is a testament to the region’s metamorphosis and permeability . . . He lives and works in Vienna, making films which are largely financed by Austrian production companies and Austrian-based cultural funds but which take Balkan history and culture as their subject matter. His films feature multi-lingual actors and multi-national technicians and staff. [13]

Rebić witnessed at proximity, as well as at safe distance, the bloodshed of the fratricidal wars that marked the end of socialist Yugoslavia. His film begins after the horror has ended, exploring instead Europe after the rain, and after the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević.

To see his vision of renewal through, Rebić combines the essayistic mode (à la The Ister) with more familiar fiction film tropes to portray the Danube as an all-powerful natural force that triumphantly restores quasi-mystical order to a world nearly destroyed by human infighting. While the years following the release of Rebić’s film did see dramatic floods from the Danube reminding local populations of the river’s power, the optimistic intimation in Rebić’s film that the spirit of the Danube might provide new beginnings and idealized multicultural families to the river’s many orphans, reads today quite tragically as of a particular fleeting moment. The vision of a unified post-socialist United Europe—in the wake of the ongoing refugee crisis and the international resurgence of rightist nationalisms—seems at once painfully fictional and ideologically exposed. The endurance of modernist fragmentation, in other words, remains more than a matter of style.

Screen shot of Donau, Dunaj, Duna, Dunav, Dunarea (Lotus Film, 2013)
Fig. 4. Screen shot of Donau, Dunaj, Duna, Dunav, Dunarea (Lotus Film, 2013), directed by Goran Rebic.

Finally, Adina Pintilie’s short docu-fiction Oxygen (2010) reimagines the story of a man who tried to illegally escape Nicolae Ceaușescu’s Romania across the Danube. Pintilie, a graduate from Bucharest’s National University of Drama and Film, joins a number of Danubian filmmakers in situating her work at the border of fiction film, documentary, and contemporary visual art.[14] In the past decade, her work has been selected for inclusion and awards at more than fifty international festivals. Given the length and format of her works, one could arguably classify her as a “festival filmmaker” rather than a national one (with the resulting implications for expected audiences). Pintilie’s 2010 film Oxygen has been described by reviewers as a “documentary which recreates the contexts where many young people have put their lives in danger just to evade communist Romania”; albeit with the caveat that the “documentary [is] reconstructed by means of a fiction film.”[15] The source material for the story is a particular event in a larger tragic history: here, the story of a man who tried to escape Romania illegally and futilely by way of an oxygen tube and the river.

Clearly, however, the “reenactment” offered by Oxygen serves a different purpose than in such examples as Errol Morris’s famous The Thin Blue Line (1998). Morris’s use of reenactment argues for the (im)plausibility of a series of events: Morris himself has been adamant in interviews to reject appellations of “postmodernism” to his work, arguing that the truth, while elusive, must nevertheless be sought.[16] Pintile’s work by contrast is implicitly set against the backdrop of the largely realist Romanian new wave: the emphasis here is on atmosphere, the modernist poetics of the shots, the circular fairytale structure (the film opens and closes with a fish struggling on dry land), all of which envelop the archival footage and echo somewhat the alchemy of Péter Forgács’s practice. The metaphor of insufficient oxygen is too close to the surface to need pointing out, but several aspects of Pintilie’s film do warrant unpacking. First and foremost is the proximity of this depiction of the tragic crossing of the Danube to a number of films about similar attempts to escape Cuba (including the popular 2000 film Before Night Falls, starring Javier Bardem). Here too the would-be escapee stands for personal liberty and free art (underscored by a scene-stealing soundtrack of free jazz). This view of the Danube even resembles an ocean more than a river: compared to other visual imaginaries that stress linearity and directed flow, Oxygen views the river as local waters too wide to cross.

More importantly, Pintilie’s Oxygen foreshadows the rapid resurgence of Cold War-era aesthetics and political imaginaries alike in the second decade of the twenty-first century. New watershed years (the Crimean annexation of 2014, allegations of Russian interference in the American presidential elections of 2016) to many read as new twists in an older story of “Western” and “Eastern” civilizational conflict, even as the (former) West struggles to reconstitute itself in the wake and against the ghostly shadows of the former Soviet Union. Mere years after the integrationist fantasies offered by films such as The Ister (cautiously) to Donau, Duna, Dunaj, Dunav, Dunarea (ecstatically), imaginaries of the Danube river once more tend to view the water as more border than artery, with one side representing, as ever, the frightening alterity of the too proximate foreigner.

Tracing the Danube’s flow in film shows us the binaries of Cold War thinking constantly subverted and as frequently redrawn. The indexical medium, dominant throughout the twentieth century and profoundly transnational by virtue of its collaborative casts, crews, and production team, serves as a mirror to the river’s own reflective surfaces throughout the long, lingering, and resurgent Cold War era. In the twenty-first century, amid the rise of new nationalisms and the shirking of collective responsibility of the crimes of the past, Europe’s most transnational of rivers remains witness and symbol once more.


Notes

[1] This essay follows the coedited volume Watersheds: Poetics and Politics of the Danube River, ed. Marijeta Bozovic and Matthew Miller (Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2016). I am indebted to my co-editor and the entire team of contributors assembled by that volume for our formulations of Danube river studies and its hydropoetics.

[2] Friedrich Hölderlin, “Der Ister.” In Selected Poems, trans. Maxine Cherno and Paul Hoover (Richmond, CA: Omnidawn Publishing, 208), 303.

[3] Dragan Kujundžić, “The Nonbiodegradable,” ARTMargins (2007).

[4] See Thomas G. Paterson, “Eastern Europe and the Early Cold War: The Danube Controversy.” The Historian 33, no. 2 (1971): 237-47; or Victor Grossman and Mark Solomon, Crossing the River: A Memoir of the American Left, the Cold War, and Life in East Germany (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2003); not to mention Claudio Magris’s magisterial Danube: A Sentimental Journey from the Source to the Black Sea (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux reprint edition, 2008; originally published in Italian in 1986).

[5] The Danube’s significance to literature and other arts well predates moving pictures and is explored in numerous essays in the Watersheds collected volume.

[6] See John Dern, “The Revenant of Vienna: A Critical Comparison of Carol Reed’s Film The Third Man and Bram Stoker's Novel Dracula,” Literature Film Quarterly 33.1 (2005), 4–11.

[7] Quoted in Laurie Calhoun, “Pragmatism, Love, and Morality: Triangular Reflections in Carol Reed’s The Third Man,” Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 16.2 (2014):117-128.

[8] Roger Ebert, “Review: The Third Man,” (December 8, 1996).

[9] According to Paul Rea, by identifying himself with “dictatorships that treat people as a ‘mass’ to be manipulated: [Lime] succumbs to the amorality of a Hitler or a Stalin”; see Paul Rea, “Individual and Societal Encounters with Darkness and the Shadow in The Third Man, Film and Literature: A Comparative Approach to Adaptation, eds. Wendell Aycock and Michael Shocnccke (Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press), 1988, 162.

[10] Dern, “The Revenant of Vienna”; see also the work of Dragan Kujundžić, “vEmpire, Glocalization, and the Melancholia of the Sovereign.” The Comparatist 29.1 (2005): 82-100.

[11] See Marijeta Bozovic, “The Danube and The Ister,” in Festschrift for Radmila Gorup, ed. Slobodanka Vladiv-Glover (Bloomington, IN: Slavica, 2016).

[12] See Francis Fukuyama, “The End of History?” The National Interest 16 (1989): 3-18.

[13] Jennifer Stob, “Riverboat Europe: Interim Occupancy and Dediasporization in Goran Rebic’s Donau, Duna, Dunaj, Dunav, Dunarea,European Cinema After the Wall: Screening East-West Mobility, ed. Leen Engelen and Kris Van Heuckelom (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2014), 142.

[14] I have in mind Péter Forgács’s experimental documentary The Danube Exodus (1998); see also the exhibit website, “The Danube Exodus: The Rippling Currents of the River,” August 17–September 29, 2002 at the Getty Center. See also Jennifer Stob, “Private Looking and Collective Memory in The Danube Exodus (1998),” Watersheds, 120-143.

[15] Doru Pop, Romanian New Wave Cinema: An Introduction (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2014), 84.

[16] See Lucia Ricciardelli, “Documentary Filmmaking in the Postmodern Age: Errol Morris & The Fog of Truth.” Studies in Documentary Film 4.1 (2010): 35-50.