Film
and Authorship
Price: $23.95
Author: Edited and with an introduction
by Virginia Wright Wexman
Subject: Film Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3193-4
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3192-6
Pages: 270 pp., 3 b&w illus.
Series: Rutgers Depth of Field
Description: A fresh reappraisal of
authorship within film studies.
During the 1960s, when cinema first entered the academy as a
serious object of study, the primary focus was on auteurism, or
on films authorship. Burgeoning cinema studies courses demonstrated how
directors were the authors of work that undermined (or succeeded in
spite of) all the constraints that Hollywood threw at them. New
critical methods were introduced as the field matured, and studies of
the author/director, for the most part, were considered obsolete.
Virginia Wright Wexman has pulled together some of the
freshest writing available on the topic of film authorship. Spanning
approaches including poststructuralism, feminism, queer theory,
postcolonialism, and cultural studies, the contributors ask, what does auteurship
look like today in light of all these developments? The contents of the
volume are divided into three major sections: Theoretical Statements,
Historical and Institutional Contexts, and Case Studies. Wexmans
comprehensive introduction contextualizes the selections and summarizes
the scholarly methods through which auteurism has been addressed in the
past; it also provides a sketch of the history of media authorship. An
extensive bibliography rounds off the volume.
Virginia Wright Wexman, past president of the Society for
Cinema Studies, is a professor of English at the University of Illinois
at Chicago. She is the author of Creating the Couple: Love,
Marriage, and Hollywood Performance and other books and articles on
film.
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Price: $23.95
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