Split Screen Nation: Moving Images of the American West and South
Autor Susan Courtneyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 mar 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190459970
ISBN-10: 0190459972
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: over 400 screen stills
Dimensiuni: 251 x 175 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190459972
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: over 400 screen stills
Dimensiuni: 251 x 175 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Split Screen Nation is a model of rigorous historical scholarship committed to critiquing racist ideology and practices.
Split Screen Nation explores the crucial ideological gains and risks that arise from the imaginary splitting of the nation into West and South, into the screens realizations of national promise in one landscape and of national disgrace in the other. Susan Courtney brings together varied cultural documents, reading each with subtlety and finesse; along with her expert analyses of key Westerns and Southerns, she studies the filmed record of atomic bomb tests, maps, photographs, advertisements, found footage, and TV. This is a rich, smart, and original interdisciplinary work.
This book delivers a genuinely original and insightful rethinking of how a multilayered mediascape shaped the ways in which Americans thought about and imagined the nations defining regions, identities, and landscapes. Courtneys study of mid-twentieth-century culture takes full advantage of the new tools of twenty-first century historiography. Split Screen Nation reaches broadly to synthesize an impressive variety of cinematic and televisual source material. It deftly demonstrates how popular Hollywood films must be seen as works ever in dialogue with their far more numerous contemporaries amateur films, home movies, government films, newsreels, local television, sponsored films, and other productions only now being intellectually mapped.
Split Screen Nation explores the crucial ideological gains and risks that arise from the imaginary splitting of the nation into West and South, into the screens realizations of national promise in one landscape and of national disgrace in the other. Susan Courtney brings together varied cultural documents, reading each with subtlety and finesse; along with her expert analyses of key Westerns and Southerns, she studies the filmed record of atomic bomb tests, maps, photographs, advertisements, found footage, and TV. This is a rich, smart, and original interdisciplinary work.
This book delivers a genuinely original and insightful rethinking of how a multilayered mediascape shaped the ways in which Americans thought about and imagined the nations defining regions, identities, and landscapes. Courtneys study of mid-twentieth-century culture takes full advantage of the new tools of twenty-first century historiography. Split Screen Nation reaches broadly to synthesize an impressive variety of cinematic and televisual source material. It deftly demonstrates how popular Hollywood films must be seen as works ever in dialogue with their far more numerous contemporaries amateur films, home movies, government films, newsreels, local television, sponsored films, and other productions only now being intellectually mapped.
Notă biografică
Susan Courtney is an associate professor of Film and Media Studies and English at the University of South Carolina. There she also co-founded the Orphan Film Symposium and has directed the program in Film and Media Studies. She is the author of Hollywood Fantasies of Miscegenation: Spectacular Narratives of Gender and Race, 1903-1967 (2005).