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Empire And Film 1st Edition Lee Grieveson Colin Maccabe

  • SKU: BELL-49420302
Empire And Film 1st Edition Lee Grieveson Colin Maccabe
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Empire And Film 1st Edition Lee Grieveson Colin Maccabe instant download after payment.

Publisher: British Film Institute
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15.64 MB
Pages: 304
Author: Lee Grieveson / Colin MacCabe
ISBN: 9781844574223, 9781844574216, 1844574229, 1844574210
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Empire And Film 1st Edition Lee Grieveson Colin Maccabe by Lee Grieveson / Colin Maccabe 9781844574223, 9781844574216, 1844574229, 1844574210 instant download after payment.

'This important new volume reconstructs the forms of production, distribution and exhibition of films made in and about the colonies. It then ties them to wider theoretical issues about film and liberalism, spectacle and political economy, representation and rule. The result is one of the first volumes to examine how imperial rule is intimately tied to the emergence of documentary as a form and, indeed, how the history of cinema is at the same time the history of Empire.' BRIAN LARKIN, Barnard College 'This superb collection of new scholarship shows how cinema both communicated and aided the imperialist agenda throughout the twentieth century. In doing so, it shows film can be understood as one of the tools of empire, as much as the technology of weaponry or modes of administration: a means of education and indoctrination in the colonies and at home.' TOM GUNNING, University of Chicago At its height in 1919, the British Empire claimed 58 countries, 400 million subjects, and 14 million square miles of ground. Empire and Film brings together leading international scholars to examine the integral role cinema played in the control, organisation, and governance of this diverse geopolitical space. The essays reveal the complex interplay between the political and economic control essential to imperialism and the emergence and development of cinema in the late nineteenth and first half of the twentieth century. Contributors address how the production, distribution and exhibition of film were utilised by state and industrial and philanthropic institutions to shape the subject positions of coloniser and colonised; to demarcate between 'civilised' and 'primitive' and codify difference; and to foster a political economy of imperialism that was predicated on distinctions between core and periphery. The generic forms of colonial cinema were, consequently, varied: travelogues mapped colonial spaces; actuality films re-presented spectacles of royal authority and imperial conquest…

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