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A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema (a Camera Obscura Book)
 
 
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A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema (a Camera Obscura Book) [Hardcover]

Jennifer M.Bean (Editor), Diane Negra (Editor), Patricia White (Contributor), Radha Vatsal (Contributor), Kristen Whissel (Contributor), Constance Balides (Contributor), Kristine J.Butler (Contributor), Lori Landay (Contributor), Sumiko Higashi (Contributor), Anne Morey (Contributor)

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Book Description

0822330253 978-0822330257 October 31, 2002
A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema marks a new era of feminist film scholarship. The twenty essays collected here demonstrate how feminist historiographies at once alter and enrich ongoing debates over visuality and identification, authorship, stardom, and nationalist ideologies in cinema and media studies. Drawing extensively on archival research, the collection yields startling accounts of women's multiple roles as early producers, directors, writers, stars, and viewers. It also engages urgent questions about cinema's capacity for presenting a stable visual field, often at the expense of racially, sexually, or class-marked bodies.

While fostering new ways of thinking about film history, A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema illuminates the many questions that the concept of "early cinema" itself raises about the relation of gender to modernism, representation, and technologies of the body. The contributors bring a number of disciplinary frameworks to bear, including not only film studies but also postcolonial studies, dance scholarship, literary analysis, philosophies of the body, and theories regarding modernism and postmodernism.

Reflecting the stimulating diversity of early cinematic styles, technologies, and narrative forms, essays address a range of topics—from the dangerous sexuality of the urban flâneuse to the childlike femininity exemplified by Mary Pickford, from the Shanghai film industry to Italian diva films—looking along the way at birth-control sensation films, French crime serials, "war actualities," and the stylistic influence of art deco. Recurring throughout the volume is the protean figure of the New Woman, alternately garbed as childish tomboy, athletic star, enigmatic vamp, languid diva, working girl, kinetic flapper, and primitive exotic.

Contributors. Constance Balides, Jennifer M. Bean, Kristine Butler, Mary Ann Doane, Lucy Fischer, Jane Gaines, Amelie Hastie, Sumiko Higashi, Lori Landay, Anne Morey, Diane Negra, Catherine Russell, Siobhan B. Somerville, Shelley Stamp, Gaylyn Studlar, Angela Dalle Vacche, Radha Vatsal, Kristen Whissel, Patricia White, Zhang Zhen


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Editorial Reviews

Review

”Despite the enormous amount of work that has been done in the last two decades on women and early cinema, this anthology is the first of its kind. It is outstanding.”—Judith Mayne, author of Framed: Lesbians, Feminists, and Media Culture


”This collection is a persuasive reminder that the hottest current topics in film theory—cultural intersections, questions of authorship, fantasy and technology, representation and the body—demand and are illuminated by feminist inquiry.”— Linda Mizejewski, author of Ziegfeld Girl: Image and Icon in Culture and Cinema

From the Publisher

"Despite the enormous amount of work that has been done in the last two decades on women and early cinema, this anthology is the first of its kind. It is outstanding."—Judith Mayne, author of Framed: Lesbians, Feminists, and Media Culture

"This collection is a persuasive reminder that the hottest current topics in film theory—cultural intersections, questions of authorship, fantasy and technology, representation and the body—demand and are illuminated by feminist inquiry."— Linda Mizejewski, author of Ziegfeld Girl: Image and Icon in Culture and Cinema


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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
kinaesthetic power, flapper phenomenon, native white masculinity, analyzable subject, flapper film, flapper actresses, doll divine, welfare films, fée aux choux, new kinaesthetic, women film directors, film historiography, late cinema, war actualities, amorous history, early stardom, deco aesthetic, film diva, early cinema, war actuality, motion picture magazine, vernacular movement, modern femininity, virtual gaze, ruined map
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Mary Pickford, Pola Negri, Florida Enchantment, Moving Picture World, Old Wives, Where Are My Children, Alice Guy-Blaché, Irma Vep, Don't Change Your Husband, Madeline Brandeis, Miriam Hansen, Board of Review, Tom Gunning, New Brunswick, Pearl White, World War, Motion Picture News, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, Lois Weber, Walter Benjamin, Library of Congress, Colleen Moore, Famous Players-Lasky
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