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More About This Title Hollywood's America - Twentieth-Century AmericaThrough Film 4e
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Randy W. Roberts is Distinguished Professor of History at Purdue University, and specializes in recent US history, US sports history, and the history of popular culture. He is the author of Where the Domino Fell: America and Vietnam (5th edition, with James S. Olson, Wiley-Blackwell, 2006), Charles A. Lindbergh: The Power and Peril of Celebrity 1927–1941 (with David Welky, Wiley-Blackwell, 2003), Jack Dempsey: The Manassa Mauler (2003), A Line in the Sand: The Alamo in Blood and Memory (with James S. Olson, 2001), “But They Can’t Beat Us”: Oscar Robertson and the Crispus Attucks Tigers (1999), My Lai: A Brief History with Documents (with James S. Olson, 1998), John Wayne American (with James S. Olson, 1996), and Winning is the Only Thing: Sports in America since 1945 (with James S. Olson, 1991).
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Preface.
Introduction: The Social and Cultural History of American Film.
PART I THE SILENT ERA.
Introduction: Intolerance and the Rise of the Feature Film.
1 Silent Cinema as Social Criticism: Kay Sloan, “Front Page Movies”.
2 Silent Cinema as Historical Mythmaker: Eric Niderost, “The Birth of a Nation”.
3 The Revolt Against Victorianism: Lary May, “Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, and the New Personality”.
4 Primary Sources.
Edison v. American Mutoscope Company.
“The Nickel Madness”.
Mutual Film Corp. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio.
Fighting a Vicious Film: Protest Against The Birth of a Nation.
Boston Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1915, Analysis by Francis Hackett.
PART II HOLLYWOOD’S GOLDEN AGE.
Introduction: Backstage During the Great Depression: 42nd Street, Gold Diggers of 1933, and Footlight Parade.
5 Depression America and its Films: Maury Klein, “Laughing Through Tears”.
6 The Depression’s Human Toll: Peter Roffman and Jim Purdy, “Gangsters and Fallen Women”.
7 Depression Allegories: Thomas H. Pauly, “Gone with the Wind and The Grapes of Wrath as Hollywood Histories of the Great Depression”.
8 African Americans on the Silver Screen: Thomas R. Cripps, “The Evolution of Black Film”.
9 Primary Sources.
The Introduction of Sound.
“Pictures That Talk”.
Review of Don Juan.
“Silence is Golden”.
Film Censorship.
The Sins of Hollywood, 1922.
“The Don’ts and Be Carefuls”.
The Motion Picture Production Code of 1930.
PART III WARTIME HOLLYWOOD.
Introduction: Hollywood’s World War II Combat Films.
10 Casablanca as Propaganda: Randy Roberts, “You Must Remember This: The Case of Hal Wallis’ Casablanca”.
11 Bureau of Motion Pictures Report: Casablanca.
12 John Wayne and Wartime Hollywood: Randy Roberts, “John Wayne Goes to War”.
13 The Woman’s Film: Jeanine Basinger, “When Women Wept”
14 Primary Sources: US Senate Subcommittee Hearings on Motion Picture and Radio Propaganda, 1941.
PART IV POSTWAR HOLLYWOOD.
Introduction: Double Indemnity and Film Noir.
15 The Red Scare in Hollywood: Peter Roffman and Jim Purdy, “HUAC and the End of an Era”.
16 The Morality of Informing: Kenneth R. Hey, “Ambivalence and On the Waterfront”.
17 Science Fiction as Social Commentary: Stuart Samuels, “The Age of Conspiracy and Conformity: Invasion of the Body Snatchers” (1956).
18 The Western as Cold War Film: Richard Slotkin, “Gunfi ghters and Green Berets: The Magnifi cent Seven and the Myth of Counter-Insurgency”.
19 Popular Culture in the Age of White Flight: Eric Avila, “Film Noir, Disneyland, and the Cold War (Sub)Urban Imaginary”.
20 Primary Sources.
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. (1947).
Hearings Regarding the Communist Infi ltration of the Motion Picture Industry.
US House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities, 1947.
US House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities, 1951.
The Miracle Decision.
Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, Commissioner of Education of New York, et al. (1952).
PART V HOLLYWOOD AND THE TUMULTUOUS 1960s.
Introduction: Bonnie and Clyde.
21 A Shifting Sensibility: Charles Maland, “Dr. Strangelove: Nightmare Comedy and the Ideology of Liberal Consensus”.
22 Films of the Late 1960s and Early 1970s: Michael Ryan and Douglas Kelner, “From Counterculture to Counterrevolution, 1967–1971”.
23 Reaffi rming Traditional Values: Daniel J. Leab, “The Blue Collar Ethnic in Bicentennial America: Rocky”.
24 Presenting African Americans on Film: Aram Goudsouzian, “The Rise and Fall of Sidney Poitier”.
25 Coming to Terms with the Vietnam War:Randy Roberts and David Welky, “A Sacred Mission: Oliver Stone and Vietnam”.
26 Primary Sources: The Hollywood Rating System, 1968.
PART VI HOLLYWOOD IN OUR TIME.
Introduction: A Changing Hollywood.
27 Feminism and Recent American Film: Aspasia Kotsopoulos, “Gendering Expectations: Genre and Allegory in Readings of Thelma and Louise”.
28 Hollywood Remembers World War II: John Bodnar, “Saving Private Ryan and Postwar Memory in America”.
29 East Meets West: Minh-Ha T. Pham, “The Asian Invasion (of Multiculturalism) in Hollywood”.
30 Immigration at the Movies: Carlos E. Cortés, “The Immigrant in Film: Evolution of an Illuminating Icon”.
31 Movies and the Construction of Historical Memory: Steven Mintz, “Movies, History, and the Disneyfication of the Past: The Case of Pocahontas”.
Bibliography of Recent Books in American Film History.
Index.
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