Films That Explode Like Grenades

Robert Kramer and the Search for a Radical Cinema

Whitney Strub author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:The University of Chicago Press

Publishing:16th Jun '26

£24.00

This title is due to be published on 16th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Films That Explode Like Grenades cover

The definitive portrait of independent filmmaker Robert Kramer that traces the revolutionary dreams of the Left from the 1960s through the end of the twentieth century.
 
Robert Kramer (1939–99) was the emblematic filmmaker of the late-1960s New Left in the United States. Yet because most of his three dozen films have been out of circulation for decades, he has long been neglected by film historians and the Left. Kramer was the cofounder of the leftist documentary collective Newsreel and the director of underground films such as Ice (1970), Milestones (1975), and Route One/USA (1989). His films provide distinctive insights into how America’s political terrain has changed over time, capturing each era’s revolutionary ethos and its contradictions. Whitney Strub’s Films That Explode Like Grenades tracks the histories of leftist film and global revolutionary movements via Kramer’s life and travels. Moving among New York City, Chicago, North Vietnam, Paris, Portugal, Angola, and other crucial flashpoints, Kramer left a major and influential body of work in his wake that has fundamentally shaped the work of radical filmmakers across the globe. 

For Strub, Kramer’s career is a key thread in an intimate history of the 1960s New Left, one that emphasizes the complexities of the movement’s internal tensions and its legacies. Drawing on visual analysis, extensive archival research across the United States and France, and myriad interviews with Kramer contemporaries, including Bernardine Dohrn, Tom Hayden, Jonas Mekas, and Kramer’s relatives, Strub transforms Kramer’s life story into a dynamic and engaging social history of 1960s radicalism and its generational legacies.

With detailed mapping of Robert Kramer’s many social and artistic contexts, Films That Explode Like Grenades restores him to a place of global importance in leftist cinema.
 

“In a signature accomplishment, ground-breaking historian Whitney Strub unpicks the many threads in the life and work of radical filmmaker Robert Kramer with keen curiosity and powerful investigative skills. The result is an unflinching portrait of the tumultuous era and the political cinema of the incandescent Left-wing artist whose shade haunts these pages.”

-- Alan Wald, author of 'Writing From the Left'

“In this remarkable book, Whitney Strub offers the definitive account of Robert Kramer’s multifaceted radical filmmaking and a new history of the evolution of the commitments, politics, and practices of the global Left. Comprehensive, thoroughly researched, and brilliantly argued, Films that Explode Like Grenades is a must-read for scholars of the Left and for everyone grappling with what a radical film culture could be in the twenty-first century.”

-- Allyson Nadia Field, The University of Chicago
“With the sharply interpretative eye of a film critic and the compulsively contextual voice of a historian, Whitney Stub has done the impossible: he has captured the many complexities of Robert Kramer, the most influential independent filmmaker to emerge from the American New Left, the auteur who captured the spirit of sixties radicalism in all its contradictory forms.”   -- Andrew Hartman, author of Karl Marx in Ame

ISBN: 9780226849881

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 454g

400 pages