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1981
Volume 7, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 1601-829X
  • E-ISSN: 2040-0586

Abstract

The fall of the Berlin Wall was a global media-event. Yet, little critical attention has been given to the images of this event. Two film comedies, (Sebastian Peterson, 1999) and (Wolfgang Becker, 2002), are examined, which offer potentially novel visual deliberation over this political, media spectacle. It is argued that the concept of the public sphere is eclipsed by what recent commentators term the public screen, which accepts the conditions of a mediated public arena for contemporary debate and opinion-making. However, drawing insight from a concept of the metapicture, this essay extends the notion of the public screen to that of public screening, with the films under analysis shown to offer layered, loaded narratives that do not simply add to the public screen, but provide a point of concentration whereby a public can screen or filter through multiple aspects of a media event.

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/content/journals/10.1386/nl.7.113_1
2009-10-01
2026-04-18

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