Hollywood, Westerns And The 1930S: The Lost Trail

Hollywood, Westerns And The 1930S: The Lost Trail

by Peter Stanfield
ISBN-10:
0859896935
ISBN-13:
9780859896931
Pub. Date:
09/01/2001
Publisher:
University of Exeter Press
ISBN-10:
0859896935
ISBN-13:
9780859896931
Pub. Date:
09/01/2001
Publisher:
University of Exeter Press
Hollywood, Westerns And The 1930S: The Lost Trail

Hollywood, Westerns And The 1930S: The Lost Trail

by Peter Stanfield

Hardcover

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Overview

For the first time, this book tells the 'lost' story of the 1930s Western. Written from a concern to understand Western films primarily as products of Hollywood's studio system, it recovers the context in which Westerns were produced, exhibited and viewed in the 1930s. Peter Stanfield highlights the hitherto marginalised 'B' or 'series' Western, the significance of female audiences, the role of independent exhibitors and of censorship in shaping film production.
 
The book includes illustrations from the following films: Arizona, The Big Trail, Billy the Kid, Cimarron, Destry Rides Again, Dodge City, In Old Arizona, In Old Santa Fe, Jesse James, The Lash, Let Freedom Ring, Oh, Susanna!, Oklahoma Kid, The Plainsman, Ramona, Santa Fe Trail, Stand Up and Fight, Three Godfathers, Trail of the Lonesome Pine, Tumbling Tumbleweeds, Union Pacific, Virginia City, The Virginian, and The Westerner.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780859896931
Publisher: University of Exeter Press
Publication date: 09/01/2001
Series: Exeter Studies in Film History
Pages: 268
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Peter Stanfield is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Kent. His main area of interest is the cultural history of American film, with a particular focus on film genres and cycles, and popular music and film. His current research is concentrated on and around post-war film cycles, in particular boxing movies, Mickey Spillane adaptations, Mark Hellinger Productions, Eagle-Lion crime films, the series of Audie Murphy westerns, and the psychologisation of the western hero.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. The First Cycle of Sound Westerns

2. Series Westerns, Will Rogers and the Emergence of the Singing Cowboy, 1931–1935

3. Series Westerns: Masking the Modern

4. Class-A Western Features, 1935–1938

5. Democratic Art: Westerns 1939–1941
 
6. Dixie Cowboys: Representing the Nation

Conclusion
 
Bibliography
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