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Hibernian Green on the Silver Screen - The Irish and American Movies (Hardcover)
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Hibernian Green on the Silver Screen - The Irish and American Movies (Hardcover)
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This study explores the relationship of an ethnic group of vital
importance in America's history--the Irish--and a preeminently
American art form and business--the movies. Curran maintains that
movies reflected and influenced their viewers' perceptions of the
Irish and that both the movies and the Irish who made them
facilitated the assimilation of the Irish ethnic group into
American society. The initial chapter traces the history of Irish
immigration to America, concentrating on the experiences of Irish
Catholic immigrants to the United States during the second half of
the nineteenth century. Irish-American involvement in the movie
industry dates from its beginnings in the "Nickelodeon Era" at the
turn of the twentieth century. From that time until their
replacement by sound movies around 1930, silent films helped to
popularize the Irish ethnic group while simultaneously transmitting
assimilationist values to its members and other ethnic minorities.
Three chapters are devoted to the 1930-1960 period--Hollywood's
heyday when American motion pictures attained technical maturity
and enjoyed their greatest popular influence. During this period
the Irish made their biggest gains both in the movies and the
nation, as screen personae such as the Irish priest, antihero, and
Irish All-American entered popular culture. James Cagney, Spencer
Tracy, John Ford, Gene Kelly, and Grace Kelly are just a few of the
Irish-American movie greats discussed. Irish success in the movies
facilitated and mirrored their rise in America and helped to
transform them from "outsiders" to a no-longer readily
distinguishable ethnic minority. The culmination of this
transformation and integration was the election ofthe first Irish
Catholic President of the United States, John F. Kennedy. A final
chapter discusses the post-1960 era. The volume is illustrated with
stills from some of America's most popular and memorable movies,
including such favorites and prototypically Irish films as "Angels
with Dirty Faces" "Going My Way," "The Fighting 69th," "The
Informer," "The Quiet Man," "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," and "On the
Waterfront," among others. As well as having great nostalgic appeal
for readers interested in the Irish or movies, Hibernian Green on
the Silver Screen is an excellent text for courses in Irish Studies
and American Ethnic or Film History.
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