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Film - Social Aspects, Sex Role & the Media, Motion Picture Styles, Media - General & Miscellaneous, 20th Century American History - Social Aspects - General & Miscellaneous, Feminism & Feminist Theory, Popular Culture - United States, Social Themes in Mo
All that Hollywood allows by Jackie Byars β€” book cover

All that Hollywood allows

by Jackie Byars
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Overview


All That Hollywood Allows explores the representation of gender in popular Hollywood melodramas of the 1950s, the last decade in which film enjoyed a pivotal cultural position. Both a work of feminist film criticism and theory and an analysis of popular culture, this provocative book examines from a cultural studies perspective the top-grossing film melodramas of that decade, including A Streetcar Named Desire, From Here to Eternity, East of Eden, Imitation of Life, and Picnic.

Stereotypically viewed as a complacent and idyllic time, the 1950s were actually a period of dislocation and great social change as Americans struggled to regain their equilibrium in the wake of World War II. Jackie Byars argues that mass-media texts of the period, especially films, provide evidence of society's consuming preoccupation with the domestic sphereβ€”the nuclear family and its values. The melodramas included in her study appeared in theaters just as women were leaving their homes for the workplace. Some films challenged and some reinforced previously sacrosanct gender roles. Byars shows how Hollywood melodramas participated in, interpreted, and extended societal debates concerning family structure, sexual divisions of labor, and gender roles.

Byars's readings of these films assess a variety of critical methodologies and approaches to textual analysis, some central to feminist film studies and some that previously have been bypassed by scholars in the field. She specifically questions the validity of readings grounded solely on the premises of psychoanalysis, arguing that the male norm inherent in the psychoanalytic viewpoint may well prevent us from hearing, let alone understanding, the female voices that make their way into the most patriarchal of films. Byars thus critiques earlier approaches to the study of women's films and offers fresh readings, emphasizing from several important perspectives the suppressed female voice.

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Byars explores the representation of gender in popular Hollywood melodramas of the 1950s. She presents a work of feminist film criticism and an analysis of popular culture by examining such works as A streetcar named desire, From here to eternity, East of Eden, Imitation of life and Picnic. Her study shows the 50s as a period of dislocation and social change in which the US attempted to regain its equilibrium in the wake of World War II. Paper edition (unseen), $14.95. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
December 31, 1991
Publisher
Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, c1991.
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780807819531

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