Description

Book Synopsis
The phrase ‘cinematic fiction’ has now been generally accepted into critical discourse, but is usually applied to post-war novels. This book asks a simple question: given their fascination with the new medium of film, did American novelists attempt to apply cinematic methods in their own writings? From its very beginnings the cinema has played a special role in defining American culture. Covering the period from the 1910s up to the Second World War, Cinematic Fictions offers new insights into classics like The Great Gatsby and The Grapes of Wrath discussing major writers’ critical writings on film and active participation in film-making. Cinematic Fictions is also careful not to portray ‘cinema’ as a single or stable entity. Some novelists drew on silent film; others looked to the Russian theorists for inspiration; and yet others turned to continental film-makers rather than to Hollywood. Film itself was constantly evolving during the first decades of the twentieth century and the writers discussed here engaged in a kind of dialogue with the new medium, selectively pursuing strategies of montage, limited point of view and scenic composition towards their different ends. Contrasting a diverse range of cinematic and literary movements, this will be compulsory reading for scholars of American literature and film.

Trade Review
Cinematic Fictions is superbly written throughout, and carries a distinct passion for its subject. This is an extremely valuable contribution to the scholarship of early twentieth-century American literature, early cinema, and American literary modernism. * Modern Language Review, Volume 106, Part 4 *
Cinematic Fictions is a well-researched study which shows that film, far from heralding the imminent death of the novel, in fact contributed considerably to the narrative techniques employed by American authors of the period. For most readers it will be particularly valuable for the light it sheds on lesser-known authors and their connection to film, a quality which clearly outweighs the book’s neglect of film outside of Hollywood. * English Studies, Vol. 94, No. 2 *

Table of Contents
  • Introduction
  • 1. Beginnings
  • 2. Modernist Experiments: Gertrude Stein and Others
  • 3. H.D. and the Limits of Vision
  • 4. Ernest Hemingway: The Observer’s Visual Field
  • 5. Success and Stardom in F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • 6. William Faulkner: Perspective Experiments
  • 7. John Dos Passos and the Art of Montage
  • 8. Dreiser, Eisenstein and Upton Sinclair
  • 9. Documentary of the 1930s
  • 10. John Steinbeck: Extensions of Documentary
  • 11. Taking Possession of the Images: African American Writers and the Cinema
  • 12. Into the Night Life: Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin
  • 13. Nathanael West and the Hollywood Novel
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Cinematic Fictions: The Impact of the Cinema on

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    A Paperback / softback by David Seed

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      View other formats and editions of Cinematic Fictions: The Impact of the Cinema on by David Seed

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 31/03/2012
      ISBN13: 9781846318122, 978-1846318122
      ISBN10: 1846318122

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The phrase ‘cinematic fiction’ has now been generally accepted into critical discourse, but is usually applied to post-war novels. This book asks a simple question: given their fascination with the new medium of film, did American novelists attempt to apply cinematic methods in their own writings? From its very beginnings the cinema has played a special role in defining American culture. Covering the period from the 1910s up to the Second World War, Cinematic Fictions offers new insights into classics like The Great Gatsby and The Grapes of Wrath discussing major writers’ critical writings on film and active participation in film-making. Cinematic Fictions is also careful not to portray ‘cinema’ as a single or stable entity. Some novelists drew on silent film; others looked to the Russian theorists for inspiration; and yet others turned to continental film-makers rather than to Hollywood. Film itself was constantly evolving during the first decades of the twentieth century and the writers discussed here engaged in a kind of dialogue with the new medium, selectively pursuing strategies of montage, limited point of view and scenic composition towards their different ends. Contrasting a diverse range of cinematic and literary movements, this will be compulsory reading for scholars of American literature and film.

      Trade Review
      Cinematic Fictions is superbly written throughout, and carries a distinct passion for its subject. This is an extremely valuable contribution to the scholarship of early twentieth-century American literature, early cinema, and American literary modernism. * Modern Language Review, Volume 106, Part 4 *
      Cinematic Fictions is a well-researched study which shows that film, far from heralding the imminent death of the novel, in fact contributed considerably to the narrative techniques employed by American authors of the period. For most readers it will be particularly valuable for the light it sheds on lesser-known authors and their connection to film, a quality which clearly outweighs the book’s neglect of film outside of Hollywood. * English Studies, Vol. 94, No. 2 *

      Table of Contents
      • Introduction
      • 1. Beginnings
      • 2. Modernist Experiments: Gertrude Stein and Others
      • 3. H.D. and the Limits of Vision
      • 4. Ernest Hemingway: The Observer’s Visual Field
      • 5. Success and Stardom in F. Scott Fitzgerald
      • 6. William Faulkner: Perspective Experiments
      • 7. John Dos Passos and the Art of Montage
      • 8. Dreiser, Eisenstein and Upton Sinclair
      • 9. Documentary of the 1930s
      • 10. John Steinbeck: Extensions of Documentary
      • 11. Taking Possession of the Images: African American Writers and the Cinema
      • 12. Into the Night Life: Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin
      • 13. Nathanael West and the Hollywood Novel
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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