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Film History & Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Silent Films, Film Industry - General & Miscellaneous, Entertainment Industry - History
Early Cinema: Space, Frame, Narrative by Thomas Elsaesser — book cover

Early Cinema: Space, Frame, Narrative

by Thomas Elsaesser (Editor), Adam Barker
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Overview

In the twenty years preceding the First World War, cinema rapidly developed from a fairground curiosity into a major industry and social institution, a source of information and entertainment for millions of people. Only recently have film scholars and historians begun to study these early years of cinema in their own right and not simply as first steps towards the classical narrative cinema we now associate with Hollywood.
The essays in this collection trace the fascinating history of how the cinema developed its forms of storytelling and representation and how it evolved into a complex industry with Hollywood rapidly acquiring a dominant role. These issues can be seen to arise from new readings of the so-called pioneers—Meliés, Lumière, Porter, and Griffith—while also suggesting new perspectives on major European filmmakers of the 1910s and 20s.
Editor Thomas Elsaesser complements the contributions from leading British, American, and European scholars with introductory essays of his own that provide a comprehensive overview of the field. The volume is the most authoritative survey to date of a key area of contemporary film research, invaluable to historians as well as to students of cinema.

Synopsis

In the twenty years preceding the First World War, cinema rapidly developed from a fairground curiosity into a major industry and social institution, a source of information and entertainment for millions of people. Only recently have film scholars and historians begun to study these early years of cinema in their own right and not simply as first steps towards the classical narrative cinema we now associate with Hollywood.
The essays in this collection trace the fascinating history of how the cinema developed its forms of storytelling and representation and how it evolved into a complex industry with Hollywood rapidly acquiring a dominant role. These issues can be seen to arise from new readings of the so-called pioneers—Meliés, Lumière, Porter, and Griffith—while also suggesting new perspectives on major European filmmakers of the 1910s and 20s.
Editor Thomas Elsaesser complements the contributions from leading British, American, and European scholars with introductory essays of his own that provide a comprehensive overview of the field. The volume is the most authoritative survey to date of a key area of contemporary film research, invaluable to historians as well as to students of cinema.

About the Author, Thomas Elsaesser

Thomas Elsaesser teaches Film and English at the University of East Anglia and is author of the prizewinning New German Cinema: A History (1989).

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Book Details

Published
November 1, 1990
Publisher
BFI Publishing
Pages
424
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780851702452

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