Description

Book Synopsis
Spanning the franchise’s entire history, from Sean Connery’s iconic swagger to Daniel Craig’s rougher, more visceral interpretation of the superspy, James Bond Will Return offers both academic readers and fans a comprehensive view of the series’s transformations against the backdrop of real-world geopolitical intrigue and sweeping social changes.

Trade Review
With a stellar lineup of authors offering sharp, original analysis of every James Bond film to date, this book delivers a fascinating retrospective of the 007 franchise at a critical moment in the extended life of the series. -- Christoph Lindner, editor of The James Bond Phenomenon, Revisioning 007, and Resisting James Bond
Featuring established Bond scholars and new voices, this collection offers new and exciting perspectives on the film franchise. While each of the Bond films are a product of the time they were made, these essays tell us that the series has relevance to the world we live in today. Well written and fun to read, James Bond Will Return will excite even the most seasoned Bond scholar and fan. -- Robert G. Weiner, coeditor of James Bond in World and Popular Culture
James Bond Will Return takes a chronological, anthological approach to the study of the cinematic Bond, enabling a totalizing view of the so-called ‘Bond experience.’ This is the most expansive and well-organized coverage of the Bond cinematic universe to date, representing film and cultural history par excellence. -- Ian Kinane, author of Ian Fleming and the Politics of Ambivalence and general editor of the International Journal of James Bond Studies

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: James Bond—Agent of Continuity and Change, by Claire Hines, Terence McSweeney, and Stuart Joy
1. Bond and the New Elizabethans: Tradition and Modernity in Dr. No (1962), by Laura Crossley
2. “A Real Labour of Love, as They Say”: James Bond as a Sexual Plaything in From Russia with Love (1963), by Lucy Bolton
3. The Midas Touch: Eastmancolor, the Bond Franchise, and Goldfinger (1964), by Keith M. Johnston
4. The Popular Geopolitics of Thunderball (1965): Look Up, Look Down, and Look Everywhere!, by Klaus Dodds
5. Bond in the East: Orientalism and the Exotic in You Only Live Twice (1967), by Robert Shail
6. The Other Fellow: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), by James Chapman
7. Diamonds Are Forever (1971): 007 and Transatlantic States of Emergency, by Ian Scott
8. From Harlem to San Monique: Spatial Dichotomies, Voodoo, and Cultural Identity in Live and Let Die (1973), by Fran Pheasant-Kelly
9. “We All Get Our Jollies One Way or Another”: The Perversity and Pleasure of Christopher Lee in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), by Julie Lobalzo Wright
10. The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)—Nobody Does It Better: “Keeping the British End Up” at a Time of National Crisis, by Terence McSweeney
11. Moonraker (1979) and the Canvas of Escapism, by Steven Gerrard
12. The Spectre of Death: Revenge and Retribution in For Your Eyes Only (1981), by Stuart Joy
13. The (Clown) Suited Hero: James Bond, Costume, Gender and Disguise in Octopussy (1983), by Claire Hines
14. Scowls and Cowls: Grace Jones, Costume Design, and A View to a Kill (1985), by Randall Stevens
15. “A Time When Indiscriminating Bed-Hopping Is Definitely Not Advisable”: Safe-Sex References in the UK Press Reception of The Living Daylights (1987), by Stephanie Jones
16. Bond in the New World Orders: Licence to Kill (1989), by Stacey Peebles
17. Cold War Nostalgia, (Geo)Political Progress, and James Bond in GoldenEye (1995), by Tatiana Konrad
18. Bond by the Numbers: Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), by Llewella Chapman
19. Bond at the Crossroads: The World Is Not Enough (1999), by Tobias Hochscherf
20. The Digital Domain of Die Another Day (2002), by Christopher Holliday
21. What Matters More: Hierarchies of Value in Casino Royale (2006), by Christine Muller
22. “Like a Bullet . . .”: Speed, Economy, and Canonical Continuity in Quantum of Solace (2008), by Estella Tincknell
23. “Sometimes the Old Ways Are the Best”: Technology and the Body in a Gothic Reading of Sam Mendes’s Skyfall (2012), by Monica Germanà
24. “It’s Always Been Me”: Spectrality, Hauntings, and Retcon in Spectre (2015), by James Smith
25. No Time to Die (2021) and The Spy Who Loved #MeToo?, by Terence McSweeney and Stuart Joy
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index

James Bond Will Return Critical Perspectives on

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A Hardback by Claire Hines, Terence McSweeney, Stuart Joy

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    View other formats and editions of James Bond Will Return Critical Perspectives on by Claire Hines

    Publisher: Columbia University Press
    Publication Date: 09/01/2024
    ISBN13: 9780231207409, 978-0231207409
    ISBN10: 0231207409

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Spanning the franchise’s entire history, from Sean Connery’s iconic swagger to Daniel Craig’s rougher, more visceral interpretation of the superspy, James Bond Will Return offers both academic readers and fans a comprehensive view of the series’s transformations against the backdrop of real-world geopolitical intrigue and sweeping social changes.

    Trade Review
    With a stellar lineup of authors offering sharp, original analysis of every James Bond film to date, this book delivers a fascinating retrospective of the 007 franchise at a critical moment in the extended life of the series. -- Christoph Lindner, editor of The James Bond Phenomenon, Revisioning 007, and Resisting James Bond
    Featuring established Bond scholars and new voices, this collection offers new and exciting perspectives on the film franchise. While each of the Bond films are a product of the time they were made, these essays tell us that the series has relevance to the world we live in today. Well written and fun to read, James Bond Will Return will excite even the most seasoned Bond scholar and fan. -- Robert G. Weiner, coeditor of James Bond in World and Popular Culture
    James Bond Will Return takes a chronological, anthological approach to the study of the cinematic Bond, enabling a totalizing view of the so-called ‘Bond experience.’ This is the most expansive and well-organized coverage of the Bond cinematic universe to date, representing film and cultural history par excellence. -- Ian Kinane, author of Ian Fleming and the Politics of Ambivalence and general editor of the International Journal of James Bond Studies

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction: James Bond—Agent of Continuity and Change, by Claire Hines, Terence McSweeney, and Stuart Joy
    1. Bond and the New Elizabethans: Tradition and Modernity in Dr. No (1962), by Laura Crossley
    2. “A Real Labour of Love, as They Say”: James Bond as a Sexual Plaything in From Russia with Love (1963), by Lucy Bolton
    3. The Midas Touch: Eastmancolor, the Bond Franchise, and Goldfinger (1964), by Keith M. Johnston
    4. The Popular Geopolitics of Thunderball (1965): Look Up, Look Down, and Look Everywhere!, by Klaus Dodds
    5. Bond in the East: Orientalism and the Exotic in You Only Live Twice (1967), by Robert Shail
    6. The Other Fellow: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), by James Chapman
    7. Diamonds Are Forever (1971): 007 and Transatlantic States of Emergency, by Ian Scott
    8. From Harlem to San Monique: Spatial Dichotomies, Voodoo, and Cultural Identity in Live and Let Die (1973), by Fran Pheasant-Kelly
    9. “We All Get Our Jollies One Way or Another”: The Perversity and Pleasure of Christopher Lee in The Man with the Golden Gun (1974), by Julie Lobalzo Wright
    10. The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)—Nobody Does It Better: “Keeping the British End Up” at a Time of National Crisis, by Terence McSweeney
    11. Moonraker (1979) and the Canvas of Escapism, by Steven Gerrard
    12. The Spectre of Death: Revenge and Retribution in For Your Eyes Only (1981), by Stuart Joy
    13. The (Clown) Suited Hero: James Bond, Costume, Gender and Disguise in Octopussy (1983), by Claire Hines
    14. Scowls and Cowls: Grace Jones, Costume Design, and A View to a Kill (1985), by Randall Stevens
    15. “A Time When Indiscriminating Bed-Hopping Is Definitely Not Advisable”: Safe-Sex References in the UK Press Reception of The Living Daylights (1987), by Stephanie Jones
    16. Bond in the New World Orders: Licence to Kill (1989), by Stacey Peebles
    17. Cold War Nostalgia, (Geo)Political Progress, and James Bond in GoldenEye (1995), by Tatiana Konrad
    18. Bond by the Numbers: Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), by Llewella Chapman
    19. Bond at the Crossroads: The World Is Not Enough (1999), by Tobias Hochscherf
    20. The Digital Domain of Die Another Day (2002), by Christopher Holliday
    21. What Matters More: Hierarchies of Value in Casino Royale (2006), by Christine Muller
    22. “Like a Bullet . . .”: Speed, Economy, and Canonical Continuity in Quantum of Solace (2008), by Estella Tincknell
    23. “Sometimes the Old Ways Are the Best”: Technology and the Body in a Gothic Reading of Sam Mendes’s Skyfall (2012), by Monica Germanà
    24. “It’s Always Been Me”: Spectrality, Hauntings, and Retcon in Spectre (2015), by James Smith
    25. No Time to Die (2021) and The Spy Who Loved #MeToo?, by Terence McSweeney and Stuart Joy
    Selected Bibliography
    Contributors
    Index

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