This volume provides a comprehensive guide to the long tradition of American avant-garde cinema, from its origins in the 1920s to the work of contemporary film and video artists. The Reader addresses major movements and key figures of the avant-garde, including filmmakers such as Andy Warhol, Kenneth Anger, Isaac Julien and Julie Dash, investigates how underground films have explored issues of gender, sexuality and race, and foreground technical innovations such as the use of Super 8mm and video.
This volume provides a comprehensive guide to the long tradition of American avant-garde cinema, from its origins in the 1920s to the work of contempo...
This title brings together a wide range of articles on American avante-garde cinema to explore the long tradition of underground film-making from its origins in the prewar era to contemporary film and video artists.
This title brings together a wide range of articles on American avante-garde cinema to explore the long tradition of underground film-making from its ...
More and more, just a few canonical classics, such as Michael Curtiz s Casablanca (1942) or Victor Fleming s Gone With The Wind (1939), are representing the entire output of an era to a new generation that knows little of the past, and is encouraged by popular media to live only in the eternal present. What will happen to the rest of the films that enchanted, informed and transported audiences in the 1930s, 1940s, and even as recently as the 1960s?
For the most part, these films will be forgotten, and their makers with them. Wheeler Winston Dixon argues that even obvious historical...
More and more, just a few canonical classics, such as Michael Curtiz s Casablanca (1942) or Victor Fleming s Gone With The Wind (1939), are represe...
More and more, just a few canonical classics, such as Michael Curtiz's "Casablanca" (1942) or Victor Fleming's "Gone With The Wind" (1939), are representing the entire output of an era to a new generation that knows little of the past, and is encouraged by popular media to live only in the eternal present. What will happen to the rest of the films that enchanted, informed and transported audiences in the 1930s, 1940s, and even as recently as the 1960s?
For the most part, these films will be forgotten, and their makers with them. Wheeler Winston Dixon argues that even obvious...
More and more, just a few canonical classics, such as Michael Curtiz's "Casablanca" (1942) or Victor Fleming's "Gone With The Wind" (1939), are rep...