|
American
Silent Film Discovering
Marginalized Voices Edited
by Gregg Bachman and Thomas J. Slater
June
2002 paper,
0-8093-2402-4, $30.00s cloth,
0-8093-2401-6, $60.00s 400
pages, 7 illus., 6 x 9
“Bachman and Slater offer an interesting collection of essays on unique, and in many ways, long-forgotten personalities and even ‘phenomena’ relating exclusively to silent film.” —Gabriella Oldham, author of Keaton’s Silent Shorts: Beyond the Laughter Gregg
Bachman and Thomas
J. Slater present an array of essays that reveal the incredible complexity
of silent films and the era in which they were produced. Essentially,
silent films conjure the names of Mary Pickford and a few white men,
including Charlie Chaplin and D. W. Griffith. These eleven essays,
however, demonstrate that minorities and women other than Pickford also
responded to the times through film. The contributors deal with changing
American society at a crucial time, examining our hopes and fears as a
nation during the silent film era.
Opening
new vistas, this book introduces us to people, films, issues, and concepts
that few of us have encountered. One example is screenwriter June Mathis,
who wrote more than one hundred scripts, brought Rudolph Valentino to
stardom, and supervised all productions at the Goldwyn Studios in 1923.
Equally intriguing is Nita Naldi, whose career and tragic life speak
volumes about America’s combined fascination with and fear of ethnic
minorities. Other key players in the drama of silent films include John
Randolph Bray (animated cartoons), Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, and female
producer, writer, and director Nell Shipman.
Contributors are Kay Armatage, Jean Chateauvert, Maureen Furniss, Mark Langer, Anne Morey, Diane Negra, George Potamianos, Joanna Rapf, Thomas J. Slater, Sam Stoloff, and Judith Thissen.
Seventeen
illustrations enliven this study of silent film. Gregg Bachman is an associate professor in and chair of the Department of Communications at the University of Tampa. He contributed a chapter to Perspectives on Woody Allen edited by Renee Curry.
Thomas J. Slater is an associate professor of English and film studies at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Milos Forman: A Bio-Bibliography and editor of Handbook of Soviet and East European Films and Filmmakers.
|
Paper Cloth
|