Hollywood Screwball Comedy 1934-1945: Sex, Love, and Democratic Ideals
Autor Grégoire Halbouten Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 feb 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501389313
ISBN-10: 1501389319
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 42 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501389319
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 42 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Discusses the impact of screwball comedies within an American democratic system reeling from the effects of the Wall Street Crash of 1929
Notă biografică
Grégoire Halbout is Associate Professor of English and Cinema at the University of Tours, France. He writes in French and English about Hollywood comedy and the social function of cultural industries, as well as gender and sexuality in contemporary film and television.
Cuprins
ForewordAcknowledgementsIntroductionBeing happyLine of descent: from remarriage comedy to screwball filmDeploying a new approach to an indeterminate and unstable genreA social and political reading of a typically American genrePart One - The screwball expression: a genre shows its credentials Preamble: the fertility of Hollywood comedy in the 1930sChapter One: Proof of identityThe origins of the genre1934, a pivotal yearThe "Americanization" of fictional sourcesA matter of languageThe etymology and the improbable "trajectory" of the term screwballGenre signaling in film discourse and movie reviewsChapter Two: Protagonists: the artisans of screwball comedyThe directors at the helmThe reign of the jack of all tradesThe director and the "screwballization" of scriptsThe actors, stars of the genreAmerican actors for American storiesThe stars, genre reference pointsScrewball timbres and tonesThe importance of the background: recurring secondary charactersChapter Three: Narrative tropes and genre categoriesPreliminary decryptionNarrative structures: "New Love", "Old Love" and fornication forestalledPlot types, a descriptive catalogueA first attempt at a delineation of narrative tropesConditions precedent: zeroing in on the coupleThe masquerade and the faces of conflictThe ordeal of alterityCrises of identity"Cocktails" and genre mixingThe impact of current eventsTones and subjects: a repetitive and polymorphic genreA generation fades awayShifting centers of interest and changing expectationsPart Two - Screwball discourse: interdiction and indirectionChapter One: A socio-economic context conducive to censorshipHollywood and the consequences of the 1929 financial crisisNew audiences, new censorsPopular art and popular culture: the ideological straightjacketMen of circumstance take controlThe censors' mission and their ideological apparatusAn improbable coincidenceChapter Two: Expressions: Screwball comedy and the forms of censorshipThe objective signsA lengthy, comprehensive and conflictual approval processThe imprint of censorship on the Hollywood work processForms of regulation: rhetoric and frames of referencePhraseology of the PCAHow the Hays Office intervenedEfforts towards an evolving methodology and judicial policyWhat analytical tools for which interpretation?The "Charter", jurisprudence and the reinforcement of prohibitionsChapter Three: Content: Ideological scrubbingCreation under supervision: a system of prohibitionsPurified language to fit the needs of Hollywood's social projectForbidden images: bodies and behaviorThe Code, protecting institutions from the screwball menaceEcho and mirror: the press's final seal of approvalChapter Four: Indirect discourse: The invention of the screwball styleProcedural DelinquencyThe boomerang effect: censorship becomes fodder for comedyThe screenplay for Bluebeard's Eighth Wife, a model of narrative expurgation and lexical attritionThe rule-breakers' arsenal: words and imagesWordplay: the ruses and pleasures of screwball languageGags and the advent of disorderThe symbolic function of objectsFrom one image to another: the metaphorization of forbidden gesturesAn unexpected mirror: the amplifying effect of marketing"Screwball Comedy, Sex Comedies"Part Three - The screwball celebration and the democratic discussionChapter One: The screwball New Deal and the society of mutual consentThe discourse on marriage in 1930s AmericaA consumer society in a civilization of leisureAmerica's marriage debate"Advice" comes to the rescue of marriageQuestioning marriageThe failure of authority figuresScrewball outlaws and their special arrangementsThe revolution of modern marriageChapter Two: The tension of the screwball celebration; preserving the democratic spaceThe persistence of the established orderPaternal consent and the wife's return to domesticityThe missions of the screwball coupleNegotiation between private and public spaceEscape from societyInvasion and living togetherConclusionThe romantic relationship, a reinterpretation of the democratic bondAppendicesFilmographyBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
The book is smartly written and deeply researched, and it joins foundational work by such scholars of the genre as Stanley Cavell, Kathrina Glitre, and Wes Gehring ... This indispensable book will be valuable for those interested in screwball comedies or Hollywood history. Summing Up: Essential. All readers.
A rigorous and nuanced work which constantly brings to light the complexities of a highly unstable genre that captured many contemporary ideological challenges . a fresh and insightful perspective.
The result of Halbout's insightful analysis is a stimulating appreciation of a beloved genre in American film.
[The] book will be particularly relevant to scholars of American humor because of its unique interdisciplinary approach to genre studies. It is a much-needed addition to the comedy corpus, for as much as the screwball genre was a reflection of a specific historical moment, Halbout shows that there is also a certain transcendent quality about its style, themes, and democratic aspirations.
Synthesizing major strands of French and English-language scholarship on the theatrical and cinematic traditions of romantic comedy, Grégoire Halbout's Hollywood Screwball Comedy,1934-1945 offers a fresh and lively reappraisal of Hollywood screwball comedies as a distinctly American film genre. The scope of his approach alone is impressive. Adroitly side-stepping the pitfalls of genre studies that are limited to the inspection of a handful of celebrated films, Halbout identifies and explores an expansive corpus, one with permeable boundaries and in flux throughout the years bridging the Great Depression and the Second World War. With exactness, he also dives deeply into the records of Production Code Administration to demonstrate how evolving censorship practices in Hollywood triggered the emergence of new visual and verbal comic styles. He charts a cultural discourse crisscrossed with contradictory and conflicting voices, echoing public debates about sex, intimacy, and marriage at a time when a democratic mythos was under great strain. Brought to light in these pages are the institutional practices and creative responses through which the dialects and effects of 'screwball' surfaced and flourished on and beyond the screen.
Initiated and propelled by the writing of Stanley Cavell, Grégoire Halbout offers here a capacious yet discerning analysis of the remarkably fecund genre known by the disarming, perhaps misleading name "screwball." Delighting in the glories of taking democratic entertainment seriously, Halbout treats readers to a lively taxonomy of the characteristics and criteria that make these films recognizable, including savvy assessments of the many directors who artfully troped love and sex into conversation-thereby eliding with comic flair the chaste restrictions of the Hays Code. Moreover, despite the madcap and zany attributes of these plots and their characters, pursuits of happiness-in their many incarnations-remain of immanent concern for one and all, on screen and off. In Halbout's company, we contend with the exigencies of marriage; the charged private and public spaces of intimacy and power; and the vexed romance of democracy. To these ends, Halbout seizes upon the narrative traits that keep these indelible films fresh, while encouraging us to ponder how and why they proliferated. Though readers familiar with Cavell's contributions will recognize "his films" in the line-up, they will also encounter an expanse of additional works that thrill-placing the achievements of the marquee instances in dialogue with the lesser known. Befitting his signal inspiration, Halbout sustains Cavell's influential investigation and extends it in dynamic ways, delivering in this volume what amounts to a now-indispensable companion for exploring the moral and aesthetic incitements of the genre-especially among its hilarious and profound exemplars.
A rigorous and nuanced work which constantly brings to light the complexities of a highly unstable genre that captured many contemporary ideological challenges . a fresh and insightful perspective.
The result of Halbout's insightful analysis is a stimulating appreciation of a beloved genre in American film.
[The] book will be particularly relevant to scholars of American humor because of its unique interdisciplinary approach to genre studies. It is a much-needed addition to the comedy corpus, for as much as the screwball genre was a reflection of a specific historical moment, Halbout shows that there is also a certain transcendent quality about its style, themes, and democratic aspirations.
Synthesizing major strands of French and English-language scholarship on the theatrical and cinematic traditions of romantic comedy, Grégoire Halbout's Hollywood Screwball Comedy,1934-1945 offers a fresh and lively reappraisal of Hollywood screwball comedies as a distinctly American film genre. The scope of his approach alone is impressive. Adroitly side-stepping the pitfalls of genre studies that are limited to the inspection of a handful of celebrated films, Halbout identifies and explores an expansive corpus, one with permeable boundaries and in flux throughout the years bridging the Great Depression and the Second World War. With exactness, he also dives deeply into the records of Production Code Administration to demonstrate how evolving censorship practices in Hollywood triggered the emergence of new visual and verbal comic styles. He charts a cultural discourse crisscrossed with contradictory and conflicting voices, echoing public debates about sex, intimacy, and marriage at a time when a democratic mythos was under great strain. Brought to light in these pages are the institutional practices and creative responses through which the dialects and effects of 'screwball' surfaced and flourished on and beyond the screen.
Initiated and propelled by the writing of Stanley Cavell, Grégoire Halbout offers here a capacious yet discerning analysis of the remarkably fecund genre known by the disarming, perhaps misleading name "screwball." Delighting in the glories of taking democratic entertainment seriously, Halbout treats readers to a lively taxonomy of the characteristics and criteria that make these films recognizable, including savvy assessments of the many directors who artfully troped love and sex into conversation-thereby eliding with comic flair the chaste restrictions of the Hays Code. Moreover, despite the madcap and zany attributes of these plots and their characters, pursuits of happiness-in their many incarnations-remain of immanent concern for one and all, on screen and off. In Halbout's company, we contend with the exigencies of marriage; the charged private and public spaces of intimacy and power; and the vexed romance of democracy. To these ends, Halbout seizes upon the narrative traits that keep these indelible films fresh, while encouraging us to ponder how and why they proliferated. Though readers familiar with Cavell's contributions will recognize "his films" in the line-up, they will also encounter an expanse of additional works that thrill-placing the achievements of the marquee instances in dialogue with the lesser known. Befitting his signal inspiration, Halbout sustains Cavell's influential investigation and extends it in dynamic ways, delivering in this volume what amounts to a now-indispensable companion for exploring the moral and aesthetic incitements of the genre-especially among its hilarious and profound exemplars.