Anne Nesbet PhD, University of California, D.E.A. Universite de Paris, Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literature and Film Studies

   
  Address

Film Studies

6209 Dwinelle
University of California

Berkeley, CA 94720
510.642.2642
Email: nesbet@berkeley.edu
   
 

Bio

Anne Nesbet's research interests include Early Soviet Culture, Sergei Eisenstein, Silent Film, Soviet Film, GDR History and Culture, Children's Literature & Stalinism, The Soviet Union and American Minority Movements.

Her current project is entitled Time Machines of the Everyday: Experiments in the Dialectical Image in Europe between the Wars.
 
 

Selected Publications

Savage Junctures: Sergei Eisenstein and the Shape of Thinking (London; New York: I.B. Tauris, 2003).

"Inanimations: Snow White and Ivan the Terrible," Film Quarterly, vol. 50, no 4, 1997.

"Coming Home to Homer: Gogol's Odyssey," Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 39, No. 3, 1995.

"Documentary Discipline: Three Interrogations of Stanislav Govorukhin," (written jointly with Eric Naiman) in Soviet Hieroglyphics: Visual Culture in Late Twentieth-Century Russia, Nancy Condee, editor, (Indiana UP, 1995).

"Formy vremeni v: Khronosomy khronotopa," (written jointly with Eric Naiman), Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie, No. 2, 1993.

"Mise en abime: Platonov, Zolia i poetika truda," (written jointly with Eric Naiman), Revue des Etudes Slaves, vol. 64, No. 4, 1992.

"Suicide as Literary Fact in the 1920s," Slavic Review, Vol. 50, No. 4, 1991.

"Tokens of Elective Affinity: The Uses of Goethe in Mandel'stam," Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 32, No. 1, 1988.