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Blackout by A Lant β€” book cover
Film - Social Aspects, Sex Role & the Media, Subject Matter in Film, British History - Social Aspects, Feminism & Feminist Theory, War & Military Films, Women in Entertainment & Media, Social Themes in Motion Pictures, International Film, Women and Film

Blackout

by A Lant
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Overview

The most universal civilian privation in World War II Britain, the blackout possessed many symbolic meanings. Among its complicated implications for filmmakers was a stigmatization of film spectacle--including the display of "Hollywood women," whose extravagant appearance connoted at best unpatriotic wastefulness and at worst collaboration with the enemy. Exploring the wartime breakdown of conventional gender roles on the screen and in the audience, Antonia Lant demonstrates that many British films of the period signaled their national cinematic identity by diverging from the notion of the Hollywood star, the mainstay of commercial American motion pictures, replacing her with a deglamourized, mobilized heroine. Nevertheless, the war machine demanded that British films continue to celebrate stable and reassuring gender roles. Contradictions abounded, both within film narratives and between narrative and "real life." Analyzing films of all the major wartime studios, the author scrutinizes the efforts of realist and melodramatic texts to confront women's wartime experiences, including conscription. By combining study of contemporary posters, advertisements, propaganda notices, and cartoons with consideration of recent feminist theoretical work on the cinema, spectatorship, and history, she has produced the first book to examine the relationships among gender, cinema, and nationality as they are affected by the stresses of war.

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Book Details

Published
July 1, 1992
Publisher
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1991.
Pages
282
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780691055404

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