The Modernist Screenplay explores the film screenplay as a genre of
modernist literature. It connects the history of screenwriting for
silent film to the history of literary modernism in France, Germany, and
Russia. At the same time, the book considers how the screenplay
responded to the modernist crisis of reason, confronted mimetic
representation, and sought to overcome the modernist mistrust of
language with the help of rhythm. From the silent film projects of
Bertolt Brecht, to the screenwriting of Sergei Eisenstein and the poetic
scripts of the surrealists, The Modernist Screenplay offers a new
angle on the relationship between film and literature. Based on the
example of modernist screenwriting, the book proposes a pluralistic
approach to screenplays, an approach that sees film scripts both as
texts embedded in film production and as literary works in their own
right. As a result, the sheer variety of different and experimental ways
to tell stories in screenplays comes to light. The Modernist
Screenplay explores how the earliest kind of experimental
screenplays-the modernist screenplays-challenged normative ideas about
the nature of filmmaking, the nature of literary writing, and the
borders between the two.