Film
and Nationalism
Price: $23.95
Author: Edited and with an introduction
by Alan Williams
Subject: Film Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3040-7
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3039-3
Pages: 272 pp.
Series: Rutgers Depth of Field
Description: Elucidates how movies
express the sociocultural solidarity of nations.
Today there is much debate over an increasingly "global
economy." But commercial cinema has been, from the very beginnings of
its existence, "globalized." From the mediums inception, films have
defined and reinforced the core values and social structures of
countries. They have also helped definesocially and culturallywhat is
to be considered "outside" the nation and what it is to be shunned.
Film and Nationalism examines the ways in which cinema
has been considered an arena of conflict and interaction between
nations and nationhood. Each section of this volume explores a crucial
aspect of the discussion. Is film an effective form of national
propaganda? Are films losing the very notion of nationhood, in favor of
a generalized, "global" cinematographic culture? What is films
influence over "national character"? In addition, the volume explores
the cultural and economic interactions between developed and
underdeveloped countries. How have third world nations defined
themselves in relation to hegemonic first world cultures, and how have
their relations been changed through the dissemination of Western
films? Throughout, Alan Williams chooses essays that enhance our
understanding of how films help shape our sense of nationhood and self.
Alan Williams is a professor in the department of
French at Rutgers University. He is the author of Max Ophuls and
the Cinema of Desire and Republic of Images: A History of
French Filmmaking.
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Price: $23.95
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