Universal Women

Author: Cooper   Mark Garrett  

Publisher: University of Illinois Press‎

Publication year: 2010

E-ISBN: 9780252090875

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780252035227

Subject: J941 studio

Keyword: 电影、电视艺术,工人、农民、青年、妇女运动与组织

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

Between 1912 and 1919, the Universal Film Manufacturing Company credited eleven women with directing at least 170 films, but by the mid-1920s all of these directors had left Universal and only one still worked in the film industry at all. Two generations of cinema historians have either overlooked or been stymied by the mystery of why Universal first systematically supported and promoted women directors and then abruptly reversed that policy._x000B__x000B_In this trailblazing study, Mark Garrett Cooper approaches the phenomenon as a case study in how corporate movie studios interpret and act on institutional culture in deciding what it means to work as a man or woman. In focusing on issues of institutional change, Cooper challenges interpretations that explain women's exile from the film industry as the inevitable result of a transhistorical sexism or as an effect of a broadly cultural revision of gendered work roles. Drawing on a range of historical and sociological approaches to studying corporate institutions, Cooper examines the relationship between institutional organization and aesthetic conventions during the formative years when women filmmakers such as Ruth Ann Baldwin, Cleo Madison, Ruth Stonehouse, Elise Jane Wilson, and Ida May Park directed films for Universal._x000B_

Chapter

title page

copyright

Contents

Acknowledgments

Preface: A Puzzle, Some Premises, and a Hypothesis

chapter 1

PART ONE: Possibility

1. Universal's Names

2. Universal's Organization

3. Universal City

PART TWO: Impossibility

4. Genre: A Category of Institutional Analysis

5. Serials: The Foreclosure of Collaboration

6. Gender and the Dramatic Feature

Postscript

Notes

Index

The users who browse this book also browse