Description

Book Synopsis
In Beyond Free Speech and Propaganda: The Political Development of Hollywood, 19071927, Jay Douglas Steinmetz provides an original and detailed account of the political developments that shaped the American Film Industry in the silent years. In the 1900s and 1910s, the American film industry often embraced the arguments of film free speech and extolled the virtues of propagandistic cinemathe visual art of persuasion seen as part and parcel of deliberative democracy. The development of American cinema in these years was formatively shaped by conflicts with another industry of cultural consumption: liquor. Exhibitors battled with their competitors, the ubiquitous saloon, while film producers often attacked the immorality of drink with explosive propaganda on the screen. But the threat of censorship and economic regulation necessitated control and mastery over the social power of the cinema (its capacity to influence the public through the visualization of ideas) not an open medium of exp

Trade Review
Hollywood, the world over, means commercial, entertaining, nonpolitical movies, distributed by big studios to theaters where you can’t get a beer. Steinmetz shows how Prohibitionists, progressives, stalwart Republicans, the KKK, and the NAACP mixed it up with the Jewish moguls and their gentile talents and political operatives to create this central site of American exceptionalism in politics and culture. Two thumbs up! -- Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
Much more than just a history of motion pictures, this extraordinarily well-written and persuasively argued book represents a significant contribution to our understanding of the American cinema’s cultural context and its socio-political interactions during the silent era. Of particular note is the completely new material on prohibition and cinema as well as the political involvement of the studios and their MPPDA representative, Will H. Hays, in matters ranging from censorship to the KKK (Ku Klux Klan). Steinmetz’s original thesis regarding Hollywood’s de-politicization is profound and far reaching. Previous scholarship has been unable to account for Hollywood’s de-politicized stance in such a way that links together institutional, industrial, textual, and socio-cultural history, but Steinmetz’s research locates the thread that binds everything together. The reader is left with an understanding of the precise way in which the Hollywood studios achieved this goal and the economic context and motives that drove their actions. This highly engaging and timely work will be of interest to a broad audience, including academics and a popular readership interested in the social, political, and cultural forces that the American film industry confronted during the volatile silent era. -- Kia Afra, Chapman University

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Bibliography About the Author

Beyond Free Speech and Propaganda

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    A Hardback by Jay Douglas Steinmetz

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      View other formats and editions of Beyond Free Speech and Propaganda by Jay Douglas Steinmetz

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/24/2017 12:11:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498556804, 978-1498556804
      ISBN10: 1498556809

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Beyond Free Speech and Propaganda: The Political Development of Hollywood, 19071927, Jay Douglas Steinmetz provides an original and detailed account of the political developments that shaped the American Film Industry in the silent years. In the 1900s and 1910s, the American film industry often embraced the arguments of film free speech and extolled the virtues of propagandistic cinemathe visual art of persuasion seen as part and parcel of deliberative democracy. The development of American cinema in these years was formatively shaped by conflicts with another industry of cultural consumption: liquor. Exhibitors battled with their competitors, the ubiquitous saloon, while film producers often attacked the immorality of drink with explosive propaganda on the screen. But the threat of censorship and economic regulation necessitated control and mastery over the social power of the cinema (its capacity to influence the public through the visualization of ideas) not an open medium of exp

      Trade Review
      Hollywood, the world over, means commercial, entertaining, nonpolitical movies, distributed by big studios to theaters where you can’t get a beer. Steinmetz shows how Prohibitionists, progressives, stalwart Republicans, the KKK, and the NAACP mixed it up with the Jewish moguls and their gentile talents and political operatives to create this central site of American exceptionalism in politics and culture. Two thumbs up! -- Michael S. Kochin, Tel Aviv University
      Much more than just a history of motion pictures, this extraordinarily well-written and persuasively argued book represents a significant contribution to our understanding of the American cinema’s cultural context and its socio-political interactions during the silent era. Of particular note is the completely new material on prohibition and cinema as well as the political involvement of the studios and their MPPDA representative, Will H. Hays, in matters ranging from censorship to the KKK (Ku Klux Klan). Steinmetz’s original thesis regarding Hollywood’s de-politicization is profound and far reaching. Previous scholarship has been unable to account for Hollywood’s de-politicized stance in such a way that links together institutional, industrial, textual, and socio-cultural history, but Steinmetz’s research locates the thread that binds everything together. The reader is left with an understanding of the precise way in which the Hollywood studios achieved this goal and the economic context and motives that drove their actions. This highly engaging and timely work will be of interest to a broad audience, including academics and a popular readership interested in the social, political, and cultural forces that the American film industry confronted during the volatile silent era. -- Kia Afra, Chapman University

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Bibliography About the Author

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