Joodse ondernemers in het Nederlandse film- en bioscoopbedrijf tot 1940

Jewish entrepreneurs have been remarkably present in all branches of the international film industry since the early 1910s, in the US as well as in Europe. This study contributes to our understanding of the relationship between the Jewish community and the film industry by focussing on the entrepreneurship of Jewish cinema owners and film distributors in the Netherlands during the interwar period. Between 1918 and 1940 Jews were both quantitatively and qualitatively overrepresented in the Dutch film business compared to their 2% share in the working population.How can we explain the concentrat... Mehr ...

Verfasser: de Jong, F.E.
Dokumenttyp: Dissertation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2013
Verlag/Hrsg.: Utrecht University
Sprache: Niederländisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27159399
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/279584

Jewish entrepreneurs have been remarkably present in all branches of the international film industry since the early 1910s, in the US as well as in Europe. This study contributes to our understanding of the relationship between the Jewish community and the film industry by focussing on the entrepreneurship of Jewish cinema owners and film distributors in the Netherlands during the interwar period. Between 1918 and 1940 Jews were both quantitatively and qualitatively overrepresented in the Dutch film business compared to their 2% share in the working population.How can we explain the concentration of this minority group in the Dutch film business during this era, and did it matter at all that these entrepreneurs were Jewish and to whom? The central aim of this dissertation is to point out in what ways and to what extent Jewish identity, or the ethno-cultural minority position attached to it, affected the economic opportunities, activities and strategies of the Jewish entrepreneurs, and indirectly the film business. To get this insight, concrete economic activities of these entrepreneurs are analyzed in a group portrait. The focus is on so-called ‘external entrepreneurial strategies’. The study shows that the number of Jewish entrepreneurs in the Dutch film industry grew explosively between 1910 and 1918, due to a combination of political, economic and social circumstances that coincided in this specific development stage of the film business. A small Jewish minority became extremely visible for outsiders and within the industry itself. This led to a public image of the film sector as a predominantly Jewish business, even though the majority of film entrepreneurs in the Netherlands was still Catholic, and even though Jewish entrepreneurs hardly ever stressed their Jewish descent explicitly in public. Presumably in reaction to latent anti-Semitism that occasionally came to the surface on the one hand, and the perceived inferiority of the film sector on the other, Jewish film entrepreneurs put in fact an ...