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Resetting the Scene: Classical Hollywood Revisited [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 356 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x152x20 mm, kaal: 641 g, 44 b&w images
  • Sari: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Wayne State University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0814347800
  • ISBN-13: 9780814347805
  • Formaat: Hardback, 356 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x152x20 mm, kaal: 641 g, 44 b&w images
  • Sari: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Wayne State University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0814347800
  • ISBN-13: 9780814347805

More than a century after its emergence, classical Hollywood cinema remains popular today with cinephiles and scholars alike. Resetting the Scene: Classical Hollywood Revisited, edited by Philippa Gates and Katherine Spring, showcases cutting-edge work by renowned researchers of Hollywood filmmaking of the studio era and proposes new directions for classical Hollywood studies in the twenty-first century.

Resetting the Scene includes twenty-six accessible chapters and an extensive bibliography. In Part 1, Katherine Spring&;s introduction and David Bordwell&;s chapter reflect on the newest methods, technological resources, and archival discoveries that have galvanized recent research of studio filmmaking. Part 2 brings together close analyses of film style both visual and sonic with case studies of shot composition, cinematography, and film music. Part 3 offers new approaches to genre, specifically the film musical, the backstudio picture, and the B-film. Part 4 focuses on industry operations, including the origins of Hollywood, cross-promotion, production planning, and talent management. Part 5 offers novel perspectives on the representation of race, in regard to censorship, musicals, film noir, and science fiction. Part 6 illuminates forgotten histories of women&;s labor in terms of wartime propaganda, below-the-line work, and the evolution of star persona. Part 7 explores the demise of the studio system but also the endurance of classical norms in auteur cinema and screenwriting in the post-classical era. Part 8 highlights new methods for studying Hollywood cinema, including digital resources as tools for writing history and analyzing films, and the intersection of film studies with emergent fields like media industry studies.

Intended for scholars and students of Hollywood film history, Resetting the Scene intersects with numerous fields consonant with film studies, including star studies, media industry studies, and critical race theory.



Showcases cutting-edge work by renowned researchers of classical Hollywood filmmaking.
Acknowledgments ix
I Setting the Scene
Introduction
3(16)
Katherine Spring
1 Reinventing The Classical Hollywood Cinema, Over and Over
19(20)
David Bordwell
II Film Style and Practice
2 The Center and the Swirl: Vincente Minnelli's Decorative Virtuosity
39(10)
Scott Higgins
3 Resettling the Score: Musical Recycling in the Hollywood Studio System
49(10)
Kathryn Kalinak
4 Hollywood Mannerism
59(14)
Chris Cagle
III Classical Genres
5 Trading on Songs: The Emergence of the Film Musical as a Genre Label
73(11)
Katherine Spring
6 Another Hollywood Picture? A Star Is Born (1937) and the Self-Reflexivity of the Backstudio Picture
84(13)
Steven Cohan
7 Science Fiction, Genre Hybridity, and Canonization in Classical Hollywood
97(12)
Blair Davis
IV Studio Labor and Operations
8 Hollywood: Promoting Collaboration
109(9)
Charlie Keil
Denise McKenna
9 Disney, DuPont, and Faber Birren: Hollywood and the Color Revolution
118(13)
Kirsten Moana Thompson
10 B-Film Production and Risk Management at Warner Bros. in the Late 1930s
131(12)
Kyle Edwards
11 Stocking the Stables: Universal-Internationals Talent Development Program, 1949--56
143(12)
Bradley Schauer
V Rereading Race
12 Censoring Racism: The Production Code and Hollywood's Chinese Americans
155(14)
Philippa Gates
13 Signifying Excess: The African American Specialty Number and the Classical Musical
169(9)
Ryan Jay Friedman
14 Dark Desires and White Obsessions: Sam McDaniel as a Marker of Blackness in Double Indemnity (1944) and Ice Palace (1960)
178(11)
Charlene Regester
15 Incursions in the Forbidden Zone: Genre and the Black Science Fiction Film
189(12)
Barry Keith Grant
VI Women at Work
16 Doing Her Bit: Women and Propaganda in World War I
201(10)
Liz Clarke
17 Genres of Production and the Production of Genre: Gender, Genre, and Technical Labor in the Arthur Freed Unit
211(11)
Helen Hanson
18 Gene Tierney, "Troubled Beauty": Star Labor, Mental Health, and Narratives of Recuperation
222(11)
Will Scheibel
VII Classicism after the Studio Era
19 MGM: Landmarks in the Decline of a Major Hollywood Studio
233(8)
Tino Balio
20 Rethinking Altman as Anticlassical: The Modulation of Classical Narrative Norms in The Gingerbread Man (1998) and Gosford Park (2001)
241(13)
Lisa Dombrowski
21 Scripting Protocols and Practices: Screenwriting in the Package-Unit Era
254(13)
Janet Staiger
VIII New Approaches
22 The Trade Papers and Cultures of 1920s Hollywood
267(13)
Eric Hoyt
23 The Video Essay and Classical Hollywood Studies
280(7)
Patrick Keating
24 Institutions of the Mode of Production and The Classical Hollywood Cinema in Contemporary Media Studies
287(13)
Paul Monticone
25 New Cinema History and the Classical Hollywood Cinema
300(9)
Richard Maltby
Selected Bibliography 309(10)
Contributors 319(10)
Index 329
Philippa Gates is a professor of film studies at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, Canada.

Katherine Spring is associate professor of film studies at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, Canada.