EN HU

Displaced masculinity and global homelessness in Refuge England (Robert Vas, 1959)

Kalmár, G.: Displaced masculinity and global homelessness in Refuge England (Robert Vas, 1959).
Studies in European Cinema. 17, 1-12, 2020.
Journal metrics:
Q3 Communication
Q1 Visual Arts and Performing Arts
title:
Displaced masculinity and global homelessness in Refuge England (Robert Vas, 1959)
authors:
  • Kalmár György
published:
2020
type:
article
genre:
research article/review article
journal:
Studies in European Cinema (ISSN: 1741-1548, 2040-0594)
language:
English
HAC:
Humanities, Literary and Cultural Studies
subjects:
Refugee, migrant cinema, masculinity, modernity, Free Cinema, Robert Vas
abstract:
The present paper explores the notions of masculinity, migration and the modern city as they appear in Refuge England (Robert Vas, 1959), a British docu-fictionfilm presented at thefirst Free Cinema Screening in 1959, directed by and starring post-1956 Hungarian political refugees. The semi-autographicalfilm, which narrates the first day in London of an Eastern European refugee, highlights the ways modernity, mobility and masculinity have been intertwined from the time of thefirst modern industrial societies. The paper argues that the Eastern European refugee's journeys through London, as he desperately tries tofind the address where he is promised refuge, can be interpreted as afigurative passage in which a succession of fantasies of the city appear in front of the eyes of the exhausted traveller. These fantasies reconfigure the matrix of the above-mentioned key concepts, as they mark the gradual emptying out of the protagonist's subjectivity to bare life. Thus, my analysis aims to place the formal and narrative analysis of thefilm within this wider socio-cultural context, indicating the ways Refuge England can be understood as an early example of migrant cinema, and a powerful commentary of industrialised modernity and its mobile subjects.
projects:
112700
DEENK University of Debrecen
© 2012 University of Debrecen