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Celluloid Sermons The Emergence Of The Christian Film Industry 19301986 Terry Lindvall

  • SKU: BELL-4951200
Celluloid Sermons The Emergence Of The Christian Film Industry 19301986 Terry Lindvall
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Celluloid Sermons The Emergence Of The Christian Film Industry 19301986 Terry Lindvall instant download after payment.

Publisher: NYU Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.14 MB
Pages: 287
Author: Terry Lindvall, Andrew Quicke
ISBN: 9780814753248, 0814753248
Language: English
Year: 2011

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Celluloid Sermons The Emergence Of The Christian Film Industry 19301986 Terry Lindvall by Terry Lindvall, Andrew Quicke 9780814753248, 0814753248 instant download after payment.

Christian filmmaking, done outside of the corporate Hollywood industry and produced for Christian churches, affected a significant audience of church people. Protestant denominations and individuals believed that they could preach and teach more effectively through the mass medium of film. Although suspicion toward the film industry marked many conservatives during the early 1930s, many Christian leaders came to believe in the power of technology to convert or to morally instruct people. Thus the growth of a Christian film industry was an extension of the Protestant tradition of preaching, with the films becoming celluloid sermons.
Celluloid Sermons is the first historical study of this phenomenon. Terry Lindvall and Andrew Quicke highlight key characters, studios, and influential films of the movement from 1930 to 1986—such as the Billy Graham Association, with its major WorldWide Pictures productions of films like The Hiding Place, Ken Curtis’ Gateway Films, the apocalyptic “end-time” films by Mark IV (e.g. Thief in the Night), and the instructional video-films of Dobson’s Focus on the Family--assessing the extent to which the church’s commitment to filmmaking accelerated its missions and demonstrating that its filmic endeavors had the unintended consequence of contributing to the secularization of liberal denominations.

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