TY - JOUR
T1 - The roots of Alexander Korda
T2 - Myths of identity and the international film
AU - Walker, Greg
N1 - Funding Information:
1 I should like to thank Professor Tony Kushner for his help and assistance with this paper, and my colleague Dr Anne Marie D’Arcy for providing invaluable references and sugges-tions. The work was completed thanks to the award of a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship. Needless to say, I am delighted to be able to record my gratitude for that award here.
Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2003/3
Y1 - 2003/3
N2 - Walker examines the life and career of the filmmaker Alexander Korda, from his early days in Hungary to the late 1930s. He examines Korda's Jewish roots, and the impact and influence of Jewish culture on his early career. Arguing for closer attention to the Jewish milieu in which he lived and worked, he examines the various attempts to elide or obfuscate Korda's Jewishness in contemporary accounts and more recent studies, and offers suggestions about the impact of antisemitism and cultural prejudices on his thinking and self-presentation. Walker argues that Korda was a more consistently and seriously engaged political filmmaker than is usually assumed, and briefly examines some of the abiding interests in his early life and the films he produced and/or directed in the period 1933-42 (The Private Life of Henry VIII, The Scarlet Pimpernel, Things to Come, That Hamilton Woman): principally, anti-fascism, British rearmament, the need to end US isolationism and the plight of the refugee. Finally, Walker looks at the ways in which issues of national and cultural roots, assimilation, belonging, and the special perspective of the 'outsider' made an impact on his ideas. He argues for a close correlation between Korda's own experience as a Hungarian Jew and an émigré and his ideas about filmmaking and the 'international film': the almost mythical idea of a film rooted in British national culture and identity that would be marketable throughout the world.
AB - Walker examines the life and career of the filmmaker Alexander Korda, from his early days in Hungary to the late 1930s. He examines Korda's Jewish roots, and the impact and influence of Jewish culture on his early career. Arguing for closer attention to the Jewish milieu in which he lived and worked, he examines the various attempts to elide or obfuscate Korda's Jewishness in contemporary accounts and more recent studies, and offers suggestions about the impact of antisemitism and cultural prejudices on his thinking and self-presentation. Walker argues that Korda was a more consistently and seriously engaged political filmmaker than is usually assumed, and briefly examines some of the abiding interests in his early life and the films he produced and/or directed in the period 1933-42 (The Private Life of Henry VIII, The Scarlet Pimpernel, Things to Come, That Hamilton Woman): principally, anti-fascism, British rearmament, the need to end US isolationism and the plight of the refugee. Finally, Walker looks at the ways in which issues of national and cultural roots, assimilation, belonging, and the special perspective of the 'outsider' made an impact on his ideas. He argues for a close correlation between Korda's own experience as a Hungarian Jew and an émigré and his ideas about filmmaking and the 'international film': the almost mythical idea of a film rooted in British national culture and identity that would be marketable throughout the world.
KW - Alexander Korda
KW - British cinema
KW - Cinema of the 1930s
KW - Cultural chameleonism
KW - Hungarian antisemitism
KW - Jewishness
KW - National identity
KW - Refugees
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0042239429&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/0031322022000054312
DO - 10.1080/0031322022000054312
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:0042239429
SN - 0031-322X
VL - 37
SP - 3
EP - 25
JO - Patterns of Prejudice
JF - Patterns of Prejudice
IS - 1
ER -