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Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture - The Silent Era (Paperback)
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Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture - The Silent Era (Paperback)
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Cecil B. DeMille, best remembered as the director of biblical
epics, was, in his early days as a filmmaker, an exemplar of
genteel culture. In 1913, when DeMille co-founded the Jesse L.
Lasky Feature Play Company, the movie industry was struggling to
attain cultural legitimacy and attract "high-class" patrons. During
the Progressive Era, DeMille artfully inserted cinema into
middle-class culture. By the 1920s, he had become a trendsetter,
producing films the advertising industry used to shape a consumer
culture based on female desire. In this work - which blends
cultural history and cultural studies - the author examines how
DeMille articulated middle-class ideology across class and ethnic
barriers to appeal to an increasingly female audience. Based on
research into the DeMille Archives and other sources, the book
provides an analysis of the director's early features with respect
to the dynamics of social change. Further, by demonstrating the
congruence of cultural forms such as feature films, theatre,
Orientalist world's fairs, and department store displays, Higashi
shows the relationship of the emerging popular culture to highbrow
modes of expression.
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