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List of Illustrations | p. ix |
Preface | p. x |
Introduction: The Social and Cultural History of American Film | p. 1 |
The Silent Era | p. 29 |
Introduction: Intolerance and the Rise of the Feature Film | p. 29 |
Silent Cinema as Social Criticism: “Front Page Movies” | p. 31 |
Silent Cinema as Historical Mythmaker: “The Birth of a Nation” | p. 43 |
The Revolt Against Victorianism: “Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, and the New Personality” | p. 52 |
Primary Sources | p. 63 |
Edison v. American Mutoscope Company | p. 63 |
“The Nickel Madness” | p. 63 |
Mutual Film Corp. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio | p. 67 |
Fighting a Vicious Film: Protest Against The Birth of a Nation | p. 69 |
Boston Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1915 | p. 69 |
Analysis | p. 39 |
Hollywood's Golden Age | p. 71 |
Introduction: Backstage During the Great Depression: 42nd Street, Gold Diggers of 1933, and Footlight Parade | p. 71 |
Depression America and its Films: “Laughing Through Tears” | p. 75 |
The Depression's Human Toll: “Gangsters and Fallen Women” | p. 82 |
Depression Allegories: “Gone with the Wind and The Grapes of Wrath as Hollywood Histories of the Great Depression” | p. 91 |
African Americans on the Silver Screen: “The Evolution of Black Film” | p. 100 |
Primary Sources | p. 112 |
The Introduction of Sound | p. 112 |
“Pictures That Talk” | p. 112 |
Review of Don Juan | p. 113 |
“Silence is Golden” | p. 113 |
Film Censorship | p. 116 |
The Sins of Hollywood, 1922 | p. 116 |
“The Don'ts and Be Carefuls” | p. 118 |
The Motion Picture Production Code of 1930 | p. 119 |
Wartime Hollywood | p. 129 |
Introduction: Hollywood's World War II Combat Films | p. 129 |
Casablanca as Propaganda: “You Must Remember This: The Case of Hal Wallis' Casablanca” | p. 133 |
Bureau of Motion Pictures Report: Casablanca | p. 142 |
John Wayne and Wartime Hollywood: “John Wayne Goes to War” | p. 144 |
The Woman's Film: “When Women Wept” | p. 163 |
Primary Sources: US Senate Subcommittee Hearings on Motion Picture and Radio Propaganda, 1941 | p. 170 |
Postwar Hollywood | |
Introduction: Double Indemnity and Film Noir | p. 175 |
The Red Scare in Hollywood: “HUAC and the End of an Era” | p. 179 |
The Morality of Informing: “Ambivalence and On the Waterfront” | p. 187 |
Science Fiction as Social Commentary: “The Age of Conspiracy and Conformity: Invasion of the Body Snatchers” (1956) | p. 198 |
The Western as Cold War Film: “Gunfighters and Green Berets: The Magnificent Seven and the Myth of Counter-Insurgency” | p. 207 |
Popular Culture in the Age of White Flight: “Film Noir, Disneyland, and the Cold War (Sub) Urban Imaginary” | p. 219 |
Primary Sources | p. 234 |
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. (1947) | p. 234 |
Hearings Regarding the Communist Infiltration of the Motion Picture Industry | p. 235 |
US House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities, 1947 | p. 235 |
US House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities, 1951 | p. 235 |
The Miracle Decision | p. 238 |
Inc. v. Wilson, Commissioner of Education of New York, et al. (1952) | p. 238 |
Hollywood and the Tumultuous 1960s | p. 241 |
Introduction: Bonnie and Clyde | p. 241 |
A Shifting Sensibility: “Dr. Strangelove: Nightmare Comedy and the Ideology of Liberal Consensus” | p. 243 |
Films of the Late 1960s and Early 1970s: “From Counterculture to Counterrevolution, 1967-1971” | p. 255 |
Reaffirming Traditional Values: “The Blue Collar Ethnic in Bicentennial America: Rocky” | p. 264 |
Presenting African Americans on Film: “The Rise and Fall of Sidney Poitier” | p. 272 |
Coming to Terms with the Vietnam War: “A Sacred Mission: Oliver Stone and Vietnam” | p. 281 |
Primary Sources: The Hollywood Rating System, 1968 | p. 301 |
Hollywood in Our Time | p. 305 |
Introduction: A Changing Hollywood | p. 305 |
Feminism and Recent American Film: “Gendering Expectations: Genre and Allegory in Readings of Thelma and Louise” | p. 309 |
Hollywood Remembers World War II: “Saving Private Ryan and Postwar Memory in America” | p. 329 |
East Meets West: “The Asian Invasion (of Multiculturalism) in Hollywood” | p. 340 |
Immigration at the Movies: “The Immigrant in Film: Evolution of an Illuminating Icon” | p. 354 |
Movies and the Construction of Historical Memory: “Movies, History, and the Disneyfication of the Past: The Case of Pocahontas” | p. 364 |
Bibliography of Recent Books in American Film History | p. 371 |
Index | p. 395 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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