Some of the earliest feature films were derived from classic
literature. Even today, most of the movies we see are adaptations
of one kind or another. People who have never read Jane Austen can
see her characters on the screen; but filmgoers can also see
material taken from theater, television, comic books, and every
other medium.
The essays in this volume, most of which have never before been
published, raise fundamental questions about cinema and adaptation:
what is the nature of the "literary" and the "cinematic"? Why do so
many of the
films described as adaptions seem to derive from canonical
literature rather than from other sources? How do the different
media affect the ways stories are told?
Film Adaptation offers fresh approaches to the art, theory, and
cultural politics of movie adaptations, even challenging what is
meant by the term "adaptation" itself. Contributors examine the
process of adaptation in both theory and practice, discussing a
wide variety of films. James Naremore's introduction provides an
accessible historical overview of the field and reveals the
importance of adaptation study to the many different academic
disciplines now attracted to the analysis of film as commodity,
document, and cultural artifact.
(Contributors are Andre Bazin, Dudley Andrew, Robert B. Ray,
Robert Stam, Richard Maltby, Guerric DeBona, O. M. B., Gilberto
Perez, Michael Anderegg, Matthew Bernstein, Darlene J. Sadlier,
Jonathan Rosenbaum, and Lesley Stern.)
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