Framing the Periphery: Unveiling the Balkans’ Cinematic Legacy Beyond the Center

Book review of Charlie Chaplin on Vitosha: The Shaping of Film Culture in Bulgaria and the Balkans Between the World Wars

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60060/MLg.2025.17.106-110

Keywords:

cinema, Bulgaria, Balkan cinema, film, culture

Abstract

This review of “Charlie Chaplin on Vitosha: The Shaping of Film Culture in Bulgaria and the Balkans Between the World Wars” traces sixteen interconnected studies that chart the rise of Balkan cinema in the interwar years, beginning with an opening essay that situates Bulgaria alongside its neighbors in forging a distinctive film culture shaped by innovation, ambition, and regional exchange. Some early reflections on modernist and avant-garde movements illuminate the ideological ferment that provided fertile ground for cinematic experimentation in the Balkans between the wars.

 

Bibliography:

Donev, Alexander (ed.) (2025) Charlie Chaplin on Vitosha. The Shaping of Film Culture in Bulgaria and the Balkans between the World Wars. Sofia: Institute of Art Studies – Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.

Author Biography

  • Peter Ayolov, Софийски университет „Св. Климент Охридски“, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”

    Peter Ayolov, PhD, has two Master’s degrees: in „Literature“ and in „Cinema“, and
    a PhD in Mass Communication. He has more than 10 years of experience as an
    assistant professor at Sofia University and more than 15 years of experience working
    as a director and writer in television and cinema. Dr. Ayolov teaches university
    course in Creative Scriptwriting. His research topics include the propaganda model
    of the media, media bias, and manipulation.

Downloads

Published

2025-06-23

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.