1st Edition

Feature Films as History

Edited By K. R. M. Short Copyright 1981
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    Bringing together the work of leading film historians, originally published in 1981, this book illustrates the breadth of methodological approaches adopted by the field and the variety of its interests. Dealing with a period from about 1924-1945, it considers feature films in particular, showing their potential as historical source material, and discussing how they provide a clearer understanding of the societies and intellectual trends they both reflected and affected. By using films as historical documents, the articles demonstrate how important new insights may be gained into the history of the Soviet Union, France, Germany, Great Britain and the United States. They provide both detailed in-depth studies and a general introduction on the problems of the type of documentation appropriate to the study of film history.

    1. Introduction: Feature Films as History K.R.M. Short  2. Battleship Potemkin – Film and Reality D.J. Wenden  3. Movies and National Consciousness: Germany and France in the 1920s Paul Monaco  4. Jean Renoir and the Popular Front Elizabeth Grottle Strebel  5. Ideological Consensus in British Feature Films, 1935-1947 Tony Aldgate  6. The First Reality: Film Censorship in Liberal England Nicholas Pronay  7. Casablanca, Tennessee Johnson and The Negro Soldier – Hollywood Liberals and World War II Thomas Cripps  8. Hollywood Fights Anti-Semitism, 1945-1947 K.R.M. Short