1st Edition

Hollywood's Frontier Captives Cultural Anxiety and the Captivity Plot in American Film

By Barbara A. Mortimer Copyright 2000
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    The captivity narrative, the earliest genre of American popular literature, continues to be of cultural significance in late 20th-century Hollywood. Many popular films of the last four decades incorporate the most common elements of the captivity narrative tradition, including a politically contested frontier setting and a plot involving innocent, family-oriented white Americans held captive by hostile, culturally alien natives. At the same time, these films offer something new to the narrative tradition: they focus on the captive who resists rescue and the challenge this resistance poses to American cultural self-confidence. By focusing on the lost captive, these films, beginning with The Searchers (1956), deal with questions about American identity raised by a white American's cultural and potentially political transformation. Films as diverse as Little Big Man, Taxi Driver, and The Deer Hunter adapted the captivity narrative's conventions to criticize aspects of contemporary American society and reject outworn models of male heroism; at the same time, however, they retained the genre's traditional assumption of white superiority and its fear of female sexuality. Bibliography. Index.

    Chapter 1: The Captivity Narrative Tradition and Hollywood Film, Chapter 2: Resisting Rescue: The Problem of the Captive's Agency in The Searchers, Chapter 3: The Captive's Return and the Limits of Community in The Unforgiven, Two Rode Together, and Comanche Station, Chapter 4: Making a Name for Himself: The Captive as Adopted Son in A Man Called Horse and Little Big Man, Chapter 5: The Captivity Plot and the Politics of Postmodernism in Taxi Driver, Chapter 6: The Rescue Mission and the Recuperation of the Hero in the Vietnam War Film, Conclusion, Filmography, Works Cited, Index

    Biography

    Barbara A. Mortimer