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Split Screen Nation - Moving Images of the American West and South (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,882
Discovery Miles 38 820
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Split Screen Nation - Moving Images of the American West and South (Hardcover)
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Split Screen Nation traces an oppositional dynamic between the
screen West and the screen South that was unstable and dramatically
shifting in the decades after WWII, and has marked popular ways of
imagining the U.S. ever since. If this dynamic became vivid in
Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained (2012), itself arguably a
belated response to Easy Rider (1969), this book helps us
understand those films, and much more, through an eclectic history
of U.S. screen media from the postwar era. It deftly analyzes not
only Hollywood films and television, but also educational and
corporate films, amateur films (aka "home movies"), and military
and civil defense films featuring "tests" of the atomic bomb in the
desert. Attentive to sometimes profoundly different contexts of
production and consumption shaping its varied examples, Split
Screen Nation argues that in the face of the Cold War and the civil
rights struggle an implicit, sometimes explicit, opposition between
the screen West and the screen South nonetheless mediated the
nation's most paradoxical narratives-namely, "land of the
free"/land of slavery, conquest, and segregation. Whereas
confronting such contradictions head-on could capsize cohesive
conceptions of the U.S., by now familiar screen forms of the West
and the South split them apart; offering convenient, discrete, and
consequential imaginary places upon which to collectively project
avowed aspirations and dump troubling forms of national waste.
Pinpointing some of the most severe yet understudied postwar trends
fueling this dynamic-including non-theatrical film road trips,
feature films adapted from Tennessee Williams, and atomic test
films-and mining their potential for more complex ways of thinking
and feeling the nation, Split Screen Nation considers how the
vernacular screen forms at issue have helped shape how we imagine
not only America's past, but also the limits and possibilities of
its present and future.
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