Examines how Cold War films depicted pertinent issues of American social class and genderFrom the mid-1940s to the late 1980s American film studios enjoyed commercial success in a range of often overlooked genres, employing a new realism to depict social class structures, capitalist desires and the expansion of the marketplace, and to turn American cultural values comically and subversively against themselves. With case studies of the Cold War comedy, the 'rogue cop' film, the brainwashing thriller and the urban romances that defined the 'new woman', 'Cold War Film Genres' explores these myriad productions, redefining American cinematic history with a more inclusive view of the types of films that post-war audiences actually enjoyed, and that the studios provided for them.Key FeaturesProvides studies of emerging film genres and cycles in the Cold War periodExamines how new genres recast gender and class conditions in terms of defining urban and suburban AmericaReveals new directions and successful strategies in Cold War studio production Charts new developments in film narratives that define American social concerns Refocuses critical attention upon the diverse politics of American film culture
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With case studies of the Cold War comedy, the ‘rogue cop’ film, the brainwashing thriller and the urban romances, Cold War Film Genres explores these myriad productions, redefining American cinematic history with a more inclusive view of the types of films that post-war audiences actually enjoyed, and that the studios provided for them.
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Acknowledgements Illustrations Notes on Contributors 1. Introduction: Cold War Genres and the Rock-and-Roll Film; Homer B. Pettey 2. Social Factors in Brainwashing Films of the 1950s and 1960s; David Seed 3. The Berlin Crisis? Piffl!: Billy Wilder’s Cold War Comedy, One, Two, Three; Ed Sikov 4. The Small Adult Film: A Prestige Form of Cold War Cinema; R. Barton Palmer 5. "I’m Lucky – I Had Rich Parents": Disability and Class in the Postwar Biopic Genre; Martin F. Norden 6. Rogue Nation, 1954: History, Class Consciousness, and the ‘Rogue Cop’ Film; Robert Miklitsch 7. Internal Enmity: Hollywood's Fragile Home Stories in the 1950s and 1960s; Elisabeth Bronfen 8. Suburban Sublime; Homer B. Pettey 9. Domestic Containment for Whom? Gendered and Racial Variations on Cold War: Modernity in the Apartment Plot; Pamela Robertson Wojcik 10. Success and the Single Girl: Urban Romances of Working Women; Jennifer Lei Jenkins 11. Paris Loves Lovers and Americans Loved Paris: Gender, Class, and Modernity in the Postwar Hollywood Musical; Steven Cohan 12. Straight to Baby: Scoring female jazz agency and new masculinity in Henry Mancini's Peter Gunn; Kristin McGee Index
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Provides studies of emerging film genres and cycles in the Cold War period

Product details

ISBN
9781474412940
Published
2018-05-22
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Weight
568 gr
Height
234 mm
Width
156 mm
Age
U, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
280

Edited by

Biographical note

Homer B. Pettey is Professor Emeritus of Film and Comparative Literature at the University of Arizona. He serves as the founding and general editor for Global Film Directors (Rutgers U.P.), Global Film Studios (Edinburgh U.P.), and International Stars (Edinburgh U.P.).