"Screen culture is culture - lived culture yet industrialized, ubiquitous yet iniquitous, pleasurable yet problematic for audiences around the world. Few scholars have the ambition to encompass both a historical and a global/local perspective, but Richard Butsch takes it all on with aplomb, expertly steering us through a wealth of fascinating archival research to reveal the emerging character of globalized media in this still-new millennium."
Sonia Livingstone, author of The Class: Living and Learning in the Digital Age
"Richard Butsch's highly original and very readable overview of the development of screen cultures is particularly striking in the breadth of its chronological and geographical coverage. His knowledge and scholarship, based on an extensive career, ring out from the text."
Richard Maltby, Flinders University
"Screen Culture is a meticulously researched work and a welcome response to the demand for a comprehensive textbook on the history of screen culture... students and scholars of film studies will find this book particularly useful."
Rahul Kumar, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: A Screen Culture History
1 American Cinema to World War One
2 Global Cinema, 1900-1920
3 The Hollywood Studio Era, 1910s-1940s
4 Global Hollywood, 1920s-1950s
5 Western Television in the Broadcast Era, 1945-1990
6 Post-Colonial Television, 1960s-1990s
7 Digital Screens in the New Millennium
8 Using Digital in the New Millennium
9 Globalized Media in the New Millennium
Notes
Index
Richard Butsch is Professor Emeritus of Sociology, American Studies, and Film and Media Studies at Rider University.