American Cinema of the 1950s
304 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Paperback
Release Date:26 Oct 2005
ISBN:9780813536736
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American Cinema of the 1950s

Themes and Variations

Edited by Murray Pomerance; Introduction by Murray Pomerance
Rutgers University Press

From cold war hysteria and rampant anticommunist witch hunts to the lure of suburbia, television, and the new consumerism, the 1950s was a decade of sensational commercial possibility coupled with dark nuclear fears and conformist politics. Amid this amalgamation of social, political, and cultural conditions, Hollywood was under siege: from the Justice Department, which pressed for big film companies to divest themselves of their theater holdings; from the middleclass, whose retreat to family entertainment inside the home drastically decreased the filmgoing audience; and from the House Un-American Activities Committee, which was attempting to purge the country of dissenting political views. In this difficult context, however, some of the most talented filmmakers of all time, including John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Vincente Minnelli, Nicholas Ray, and Billy Wilder produced some of their most remarkable work.

Bringing together original essays by ten respected scholars in the field, American Cinema of the 1950s explores the impact of the cultural environment of this decade on film, and the impact of film on the American cultural milieu. Contributors examine the signature films of the decade, including From Here to Eternity, Sunset Blvd., Singin' in the Rain, Shane, Rear Window, and Rebel Without a Cause, as well as lesser-known but equally compelling films, such as Dial 1119, Mystery Street, Suddenly, Summer Stock, The Last Hunt, and many others.

Provocative, engaging, and accessible to general readers as well as scholars, this volume provides a unique lens through which to view the links between film and the prevailing social and historical events of the decade.

‘There is nothing like this series. Screen Decades firmly situates American cinema in the realms of material culture, popular culture, cultural narrative, reception analysis, and industrial history.’ American Quarterly

MURRAY POMERANCE is a professor and chair in the department of sociology at Ryerson University.
Movies and the 1950s / Murray Pomerance
1950: movies and landscapes / Mary Beth Haralovich
1951: movies and the new faces of masculinity / Kristen Hatch
1952: movies and the paradox of female stardom / Sumiko Higashi
1953: movies and our secret lives / Rebecca Bell-Metereau
1954: movies and the walls of privacy / Michael DeAngelis
1955: movies and growing up ... absurd / Jon Lewis
1956: movies and the crack of doom / Barry Keith Grant
1957: movies and the search for proportion / Murray Pomerance
1958: movies and allegories of ambivalence / Adrienne L. McLean
1959: movies and the racial divide / Arthur Knight
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