Virtual Voyages – Cinema and Travel
Autor Jeffrey Ruoffen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 ian 2006
"Contributors." Rick Altman, Paula Amad, Dana Benelli, Peter J. Bloom, Alison Griffiths, Tom Gunning, Hamid Naficy, Jennifer Lynn Peterson, Lauren Rabinovitz, Jeffrey Ruoff, Alexandra Schneider, Amy J. Staples
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822337133
ISBN-10: 0822337134
Pagini: 312
Ilustrații: 41 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 230 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 0822337134
Pagini: 312
Ilustrații: 41 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 151 x 230 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Locul publicării:United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: The Filmic Fourth Dimension: Cinema as Audiovisual Vehicle / Jeffrey Ruoff 1
I. Traveling Machines: Space, Time, Difference
“The Whole World Within Reach”: Travel Images without Borders / Tom Gunning 25
From Hale’s Tours to Star Tours: Virtual Voyages, Travel Ride Films,
>From Lecturer’s Prop to Industrial Product: The Early History of Travel Films / Rick Altman 61
II. Travelogues and Silent Cinema
“The Nation’s First Playground”: Travel Films and the American West, 1895–1920 / Jennifer Lynn Peterson 79
Between the “Familiar Text” and the “Book of the World”: Touring the
>Lured by the East: Ethnographic and Expedition Films about Nomadic
Tribes—The Case of Grass (1925) / Hamid Naficy 117
Trans-Saharan Automotive Cinema: Citroen-, Renault-, and
>Homemade Travelogues: Autosonntag—A Film Safari in the
>III. Travelogues in the Sound Era
Hollywood and the Attractions of the Travelogue / Dana Benelli 177
“The Last of the Great (Foot-Slogging) Explorers”: Lewis Cotlow and
>Show and Tell: The 16mm Travel Lecture Film / Jeffrey Ruoff 217
Time Traveling IMAX Style: Tales from the Giant Screen / Alison Griffiths 238
Works Cited 259
Contributors 283
Index 285
Introduction: The Filmic Fourth Dimension: Cinema as Audiovisual Vehicle / Jeffrey Ruoff 1
I. Traveling Machines: Space, Time, Difference
“The Whole World Within Reach”: Travel Images without Borders / Tom Gunning 25
From Hale’s Tours to Star Tours: Virtual Voyages, Travel Ride Films,
>From Lecturer’s Prop to Industrial Product: The Early History of Travel Films / Rick Altman 61
II. Travelogues and Silent Cinema
“The Nation’s First Playground”: Travel Films and the American West, 1895–1920 / Jennifer Lynn Peterson 79
Between the “Familiar Text” and the “Book of the World”: Touring the
>Lured by the East: Ethnographic and Expedition Films about Nomadic
Tribes—The Case of Grass (1925) / Hamid Naficy 117
Trans-Saharan Automotive Cinema: Citroen-, Renault-, and
>Homemade Travelogues: Autosonntag—A Film Safari in the
>III. Travelogues in the Sound Era
Hollywood and the Attractions of the Travelogue / Dana Benelli 177
“The Last of the Great (Foot-Slogging) Explorers”: Lewis Cotlow and
>Show and Tell: The 16mm Travel Lecture Film / Jeffrey Ruoff 217
Time Traveling IMAX Style: Tales from the Giant Screen / Alison Griffiths 238
Works Cited 259
Contributors 283
Index 285
Recenzii
Virtual Voyages offers us an incisive look at the ways and means by which nonfiction cinema has mobilized itself to span time and space, carrying viewers across magical expanses for what appears to be a nominal price. The hidden costs and complex pleasures of virtual travel receive close scrutiny in a book that is sure to stimulate further explorations. Bill Nichols, author of Introduction to Documentary
Stretching from early cinema to IMAX, Virtual Voyages offers the best tour yet available of the production and presentation of travel films, one of the most durable and intriguingand too long overlookedof film genres. The reprinted and new essays collected by Jeffrey Ruoff historically situate Hales Tours, Burton Holmess lectures, home movies, Grass, Jungle Headhunters, Everest, and a host of other examples of the genre, and theorize the particular knowledges and pleasures the travel film offers of an exotic and mundane world in motion. Gregory Waller, editor of Moviegoing in America: A Sourcebook in the History of Film Exhibition
"Virtual Voyages offers us an incisive look at the ways and means by which nonfiction cinema has mobilized itself to span time and space, carrying viewers across magical expanses for what appears to be a nominal price. The hidden costs and complex pleasures of virtual travel receive close scrutiny in a book that is sure to stimulate further explorations." Bill Nichols, author of Introduction to Documentary "Stretching from early cinema to IMAX, Virtual Voyages offers the best tour yet available of the production and presentation of travel films, one of the most durable and intriguing--and too long overlooked--of film genres. The reprinted and new essays collected by Jeffrey Ruoff historically situate Hale's Tours, Burton Holmes's lectures, home movies, Grass, Jungle Headhunters, Everest, and a host of other examples of the genre, and theorize the particular knowledges and pleasures the travel film offers of an exotic and mundane world in motion." Gregory Waller, editor of Moviegoing in America: A Sourcebook in the History of Film Exhibition "One of the many merits of Virtual Voyages is the way it crosses over these boundaries to offer historically grounded analyses of a vast number of travel films, ranging from ride films (Lauren Rabinovitz's essay) and travel lecture films (the two essays by Rick Altman and Jeffrey Ruoff) to archival films (Paula Amad), ethnographic films (Hamid Naficy), commercial travel films sponsored either by American railway companies (Jennifer Lynn Peterson) or the French automobile industry (Peter J. Bloom), Swiss home movies (Alexandra Schneider), popular expeditionary films (Amy J. Staples), IMAX travel movies (Alison Griffiths), and Hollywood's own 1930s incursions on the travelogue (Dana Benelli's essay, the only one which addresses fiction)." - Sofia Sampaio, Scope, Issue 24, October 2012
Stretching from early cinema to IMAX, Virtual Voyages offers the best tour yet available of the production and presentation of travel films, one of the most durable and intriguingand too long overlookedof film genres. The reprinted and new essays collected by Jeffrey Ruoff historically situate Hales Tours, Burton Holmess lectures, home movies, Grass, Jungle Headhunters, Everest, and a host of other examples of the genre, and theorize the particular knowledges and pleasures the travel film offers of an exotic and mundane world in motion. Gregory Waller, editor of Moviegoing in America: A Sourcebook in the History of Film Exhibition
"Virtual Voyages offers us an incisive look at the ways and means by which nonfiction cinema has mobilized itself to span time and space, carrying viewers across magical expanses for what appears to be a nominal price. The hidden costs and complex pleasures of virtual travel receive close scrutiny in a book that is sure to stimulate further explorations." Bill Nichols, author of Introduction to Documentary "Stretching from early cinema to IMAX, Virtual Voyages offers the best tour yet available of the production and presentation of travel films, one of the most durable and intriguing--and too long overlooked--of film genres. The reprinted and new essays collected by Jeffrey Ruoff historically situate Hale's Tours, Burton Holmes's lectures, home movies, Grass, Jungle Headhunters, Everest, and a host of other examples of the genre, and theorize the particular knowledges and pleasures the travel film offers of an exotic and mundane world in motion." Gregory Waller, editor of Moviegoing in America: A Sourcebook in the History of Film Exhibition "One of the many merits of Virtual Voyages is the way it crosses over these boundaries to offer historically grounded analyses of a vast number of travel films, ranging from ride films (Lauren Rabinovitz's essay) and travel lecture films (the two essays by Rick Altman and Jeffrey Ruoff) to archival films (Paula Amad), ethnographic films (Hamid Naficy), commercial travel films sponsored either by American railway companies (Jennifer Lynn Peterson) or the French automobile industry (Peter J. Bloom), Swiss home movies (Alexandra Schneider), popular expeditionary films (Amy J. Staples), IMAX travel movies (Alison Griffiths), and Hollywood's own 1930s incursions on the travelogue (Dana Benelli's essay, the only one which addresses fiction)." - Sofia Sampaio, Scope, Issue 24, October 2012
Notă biografică
Jeffrey Ruoff, ed.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"Stretching from early cinema to IMAX, "Virtual Voyages" offers the best tour yet available of the production and presentation of travel films, one of the most durable and intriguing--and too long overlooked--of film genres. The reprinted and new essays collected by Jeffrey Ruoff historically situate "Hale's Tours," Burton Holmes's lectures, home movies, "Grass," "Jungle Headhunters," "Everest," and a host of other examples of the genre, and theorize the particular knowledges and pleasures the travel film offers of an exotic and mundane world in motion."--Gregory Waller, editor of "Moviegoing in America: A Sourcebook in the History of Film Exhibition"
Descriere
A collection of essays focused on the pivotal role of travelogues within the history of cinema