This path-breaking book reveals how Hollywood became "Hollywood" and
what that meant for the politics of America and American film.
Working-Class Hollywood tells the story of filmmaking in the first
three decades of the twentieth century, a time when going to the
movies could transform lives and when the cinema was a battleground
for control of American consciousness. Steven Ross documents the rise
of a working-class film movement that challenged the dominant
political ideas of the day. Between 1907 and 1930, worker filmmakers
repeatedly clashed with censors, movie industry leaders, and federal
agencies over the kinds of images and subjects audiences would be
allowed to see. The outcome of these battles was critical to our own
times, for the victors got to shape the meaning of class in twentieth-
century America. Surveying several hundred movies made by or about
working men and women, Ross shows how filmmakers were far more
concerned with class conflict during the silent era than at any
subsequent time. Directors like Charlie Chaplin, D. W. Griffith, and
William de Mille made movies that defended working people and
chastised their enemies. Worker filmmakers went a step further and
produced movies from A Martyr to His Cause (1911) to The Gastonia
Textile Strike (1929) that depicted a unified working class using
strikes, unions, and socialism to transform a nation. J. Edgar Hoover
considered these class-conscious productions so dangerous that he
assigned secret agents to spy on worker filmmakers. Liberal and
radical films declined in the 1920s as an emerging Hollywood studio
system, pressured by censors and Wall Street investors, pushed
American film in increasingly conservative directions. Appealing to
people's dreams of luxury and upward mobility, studios produced lavish
fantasy films that shifted popular attention away from the problems of
the workplace and toward the pleasures of the new consumer society.
While worker filmmakers were trying to heighten class consciousness,
Hollywood producers were suggesting that class no longer mattered.
Working-Class Hollywood shows how silent films helped shape the modern
belief that we are a classless nation.
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Silent Film and the Shaping of Class in America
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691214641
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter