Monitoring the Movies: The Fight over Film Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century Urban America

Monitoring the Movies: The Fight over Film Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century Urban America

by Jennifer Fronc
Monitoring the Movies: The Fight over Film Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century Urban America

Monitoring the Movies: The Fight over Film Censorship in Early Twentieth-Century Urban America

by Jennifer Fronc

Hardcover

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Overview

As movies took the country by storm in the early twentieth century, Americans argued fiercely about whether municipal or state authorities should step in to control what people could watch when they went to movie theaters, which seemed to be springing up on every corner. Many who opposed the governmental regulation of film conceded that some entity—boards populated by trusted civic leaders, for example—needed to safeguard the public good. The National Board of Review of Motion Pictures (NB), a civic group founded in New York City in 1909, emerged as a national cultural chaperon well suited to protect this emerging form of expression from state incursions.

Using the National Board’s extensive files, Monitoring the Movies offers the first full-length study of the NB and its campaign against motion-picture censorship. Jennifer Fronc traces the NB’s Progressive-era founding in New York; its evolving set of “standards” for directors, producers, municipal officers, and citizens; its “city plan,” which called on citizens to report screenings of condemned movies to local officials; and the spread of the NB’s influence into the urban South. Ultimately, Monitoring the Movies shows how Americans grappled with the issues that arose alongside the powerful new medium of film: the extent of the right to produce and consume images and the proper scope of government control over what citizens can see and show.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477313794
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 12/10/2017
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

JENNIFER FRONC is an associate professor of history at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. She is the author of New York Undercover: Private Surveillance in the Progressive Era.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: The Origins of the Anticensorship Movement
  • Chapter 1. The Lesser of Two Evils: Debating Motion Picture Censorship, 1907-1912
  • Chapter 2. “Critical and Constructive”: The National Board’s “Standards” and City Plan for Voluntary Motion Picture Review, 1912-1916
  • Chapter 3. “An Historical Presentation”: The Birth of a Nation and the City Plan, 1909-1917
  • Chapter 4. “Is Any Girl Safe?” White Slave Traffic Films and the Geography of Censorship, 1914-1917
  • Chapter 5. “Whether You Like Pictures or Not”: The General Federation of Women’s Clubs and State Censorship Legislation, 1916-1920
  • Chapter 6. Southern Enterprises: Building Better Films Committees in the Urban South, 1921-1924
  • Conclusion: Censorship and the Age of Self-Regulation, 1924-1968
  • Appendix: A Partial List of Cities Cooperating with the National Board of Review, 1918
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

What People are Saying About This

Kathryn Fuller-Seeley

"A terrific, well-argued, and engaging book that will appeal to readers in American history and film history. By mining primary sources from institutional records, Jennifer Fronc is able to provide the first account that really gets inside the workings of the National Board of Review."

Matthew H. Bernstein

"This is an extremely important book, a major, highly readable, well-researched contribution to the scholarship on the history of movie censorship and regulation in the Progressive era. Fronc provides a rich and diverse portrait of the social matrix that informed the shape, success, and limits of the National Board of Review’s efforts to encourage better films and defeat censorship laws."

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