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A Social History of Iranian Cinema, Volume 2 – The Industrializing Years, 1941–1978

Autor Hamid Naficy
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 sep 2011
Under the rule of Mohammad Reza Shah, from 1941 until 1979, Iranian cinema flourished and became industrialized. At its height, the industry produced more than ninety films each year. The state was instrumental in building the infrastructures of the cinema and television industries, and it instituted a vast apparatus of censorship and patronage. During the Second World War, the Allied powers competed to control the movies shown in Iran. In the following decades, two parallel cinemas emerged: commercial filmfarsi movies exemplified by the entertaining stewpot and tough-guy genres and a smaller but influential cinema of dissent, the new-wave cinema. Ironically, the state funded and censored much of the new-wave cinema, which grew bolder in its criticism as Pahlavi authoritarianism consolidated. Produced by Westernized filmmakers in collaboration with dissident writers, the new-wave cinema did well in international film festivals, beginning the globalization of Iranian cinema.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822347743
ISBN-10: 0822347741
Pagini: 560
Ilustrații: 83 photographs, 7 tables
Dimensiuni: 168 x 232 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MD – Duke University Press

Recenzii

“This magisterial four-volume work on Iranian cinema will be the defining work on the topic for a long time to come. Situating film within its socio-political context, the work covers the period leading up to the Constitutional Revolution and continues after the Islamic Revolution, examining questions about modernity, globalization, Islam and feminism along the way. It is a definitive work for our thinking about cinema and society and how issues of creativity and expression in one particular form, film, should be integrated into a wider engagement with social issues. Demand that your library buys this superb work of academic scholarship!” Annabelle Sreberny, SOAS, University of London“Hamid Naficy is already established as the doyen of historians as well as critics of Iranian cinema. This massive, detailed, as well as extremely scholarly critical history of Iranian cinema since its very foundation more than a century ago--based as it is on a good understanding of modern Iranian political and social history--is the crowning of all his highly instructive and informative works so far. Each of the volumes can be read separately as well as a part of this colossal critical narrative. To say that it is a must read for virtually all concerned with modern Iranian history, and not just cinema and the arts, is to state the obvious.” Homa Katouzian, author of The Persians, Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern Iran
"This magisterial four-volume work on Iranian cinema will be the defining work on the topic for a long time to come. Situating film within its socio-political context, the work covers the period leading up to the Constitutional Revolution and continues after the Islamic Revolution, examining questions about modernity, globalization, Islam and feminism along the way. It is a definitive work for our thinking about cinema and society and how issues of creativity and expression in one particular form, film, should be integrated into a wider engagement with social issues. Demand that your library buys this superb work of academic scholarship!" Annabelle Sreberny, SOAS, University of London "Hamid Naficy is already established as the doyen of historians as well as critics of Iranian cinema. This massive, detailed, as well as extremely scholarly critical history of Iranian cinema since its very foundation more than a century ago--based as it is on a good understanding of modern Iranian political and social history--is the crowning of all his highly instructive and informative works so far. Each of the volumes can be read separately as well as a part of this colossal critical narrative. To say that it is a must read for virtually all concerned with modern Iranian history, and not just cinema and the arts, is to state the obvious." Homa Katouzian, author of The Persians, Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern Iran

Notă biografică


Cuprins

List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Organization of the Volumes xxi
A Word about Illustrations xxvii
List of Abbreviations xxix
1. International Haggling over Iranian Public Screens 1
2. The Statist Documentary Cinema and Its Alternatives 49
3. Commercial Cinema's Evolution: From Artisanal Mode to Hybrid Production 147
4. Family Melodramas and Comedies: The Stewpot Movie Genre 197
5. Males, Masculinity, and Power: The Tough-Guy Movie Genre and Its Evolution 261
6. A Dissident Cinema: New-Wave Films and the End of an Era 325
Notes 433
Bibliography 473
Index 497

Descriere

The second of 4 volumes in the definitive history of Iranian film