When the small cameras and portable projectors that used 16mm film stock emerged in 1923, they allowed--for the first time in history--the possibility that anyone could make, show, and watch movies. A foundational but largely forgotten film format that offered a suite of technologies, 16mm was a democratic alternative to the larger and more expensive 35mm technology used by the commercial film industries around the world. With the remarkable ubiquity and utility of 16mm, moving images came to be integral to the way we play, learn, fight, work, and document the world, seeding the path to our current world of portable technologies and personal media.
To mark 16mm's first 100 years, the essays in this book consolidate and catalyse considerations of the uniquely important--but still surprisingly underestimated and understudied--role that 16mm has played in film and media theory, history, and practice. It has long been known that artists and activists relied on 16mm cameras and projectors as tools of experimentation, organization, upheaval, and advocacy. Chapters here revisit these assumptions but also survey its many varied and additional uses: delivering public service messages, promoting corporate public relations, boosting church attendance, preaching good hygiene, instilling efficiency, popularizing political candidates, spreading propaganda, exploring sexuality, and encouraging community dialogue. In short, tis innovative film format facilitated new forms of hobby, play, work, learning and creativity. From the local to the transnational, small gauge filmmaking and showing also became integral to colonialist, imperialist, nationalist, and multi-nationalist institutions and efforts.
In effect, for 100 years now, this uniquely important film format upended and shaped creative, political, governmental, juridical, sexual, educational, recreational, informational, televisual, industrial, promotional, and experimental practices and activities. It was integral to the expansion and evolution of the audio-visual languages that are a common-sense element of our mediated world. Its histories serve as a crucial and telling bridge from past media practices to our present wherein mobile, adaptable, and flexible moving image and sounds continue to thrive.
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This book explores 100 years of 16mm film, a foundational but largely forgotten technology that had a global impact on filmmaking and film-watching through much of the twentieth century. An affordable, off-the-shelf media technology, 16mm had an outsized impact on media history and set us down the path to our current world of portable technologies and personal media.
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Part I. Technology and Industry
1: Alice Lovejoy: Forests, Fibers, and Film: The International Chemical Industry and the Rise of 16mm
2: Andrea Mariani andSimona Schneider: 16mm Standardization and Agfa's Strategic Policies in Fascist Italy
3: Louis Pelletier: 16mm Leaves Home: The Ciné-Kodak Special and the Rise of Professional Small-Gauge Filmmaking
4: Martin L. Johnson: 16mm's Other Pioneer: Considering Bell & Howell
5: John Powers: A Little Steam Locomotive, Right in Your Hands: The Bolex H-16 Camera and the American Avant-Garde
Part II. The Audiovisual State
6: Tom Rice: The Raw Stock Exchange: 16mm Across the British Empire
7: Navdeep Sharma: Modern, Mobile, and Modular: 16mm Projectors and the Promise of Development in India, 1945-1965
8: Loren Pilcher: Making Progress at the Margins? Segregation and Southern Turpentine on 16mm
9: Lisa M. Rabin: Cold War "Useable Knowledge" on 16mm: Julien Bryan, the International Film Foundation, and US Area Studies, 1945-1980
10: Konrad Klejsa: The Perverse Incentive: Small-Gauge Cinema Chain in the People's Republic of Poland
Part III. Circulation and Networks
11: Charles Tepperman,Keith M. Johnston,Andrea Mariani,Noriko Morisue, andSimona Schneider: Moving Amateur Movies: The International Amateur Cinema Network in the 1930s
12: Tanya Goldman: A "Lusty Infant" Comes of Age: The Allied Non-Theatrical Film Association and the Growth of the 16mm Sector, 1939-1949
13: Kit Hughes: Connection and Projection: The Lost Lives of 16mm Kinescope Networks
14: Rafael de Luna Freire,Filipe Gama, andTiago Quintes: A Survey of the History of Non-Theatrical 16mm Film Exhibition in Brazil until the 1960s
15: Michael Zryd: 16mm as North American Experimental Film's Medium Gauge
Part IV. New Sites and Expanded Practices
16: Denise Khor: Beyond Home Movies: Japanese Americans, Amateur Filmmaking, and Camera Clubs in the 1930s
17: Joseph W. Ho: Moving Visions: 16mm Filmmaking as Transnational Missionary Apparatus in Twentieth-Century East Asia
18: Liz Czach: 16mm as a Professional Filmmaking Tool: The Case of Women Film-Lecturers
19: Scott Curtis: 16mm, Postwar Radiology, and the Production of Knowledge
20: Travis Vogan: 16mm and Football: Teaching and Selling
21: Eric Schaefer: 16mm Smut
22: Josh Guilford: Instructions for Experimentation: Multi-Projection Films, Portable Projectors, and Avant-Garde Instruction Sheets
23: Paola Margulis: Standards and Institutionalization: 16mm in Political Documentaries of the 1980s in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay
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Gregory A. Waller is Provost Professor Emeritus in Cinema and Media Studies in the Media School at Indiana University at Bloomington. He served as editor of Film History: An International Journal (2013-2024) and co-directed the Century of 16mm project based at Indiana University. His publications on the history of film exhibition and non-theatrical cinema include Main Street Amusements: Movies and Commercial Entertainment in
a Southern City, 1895-1930 and Beyond the Movie Theater: Sites, Sponsors, Uses, Audiences.
Haidee Wasson is Associate Dean of Fine Arts and Distinguished University Research Professor in Film and Media Studies at Concordia University, Montreal. She is author of multiple award-winning volumes, including Everyday Movies: Portability and the Transformation of American Culture and co-editor of the influential book Useful Cinema. She lectures and publishes internationally on film and media history and culture.
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Selling point: Offers a new way to think about what film technology could do, where it was used, and by whom
Selling point: Demonstrates for the first time the international scale and scope of 16mm technology and its uses
Selling point: Brings together normally separate spheres of cultural activity (sports media, science media, governmental films, avant-garde) into a comparative field
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197687178
Publisert
2026-01-06
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
576