American Energy Cinema
(livre en anglais)
Sous la direction de Robert Lifset, Raechel Lutz et Sarah Stanford-McIntyre
Moyenne des votes :
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
Votre vote : -
Description de l'ouvrage :
Historians investigate the relationships between film, culture, and energy.
American Energy Cinema explores how Hollywood movies have portrayed energy from the early film era to the present. Looking at classics like Giant, Silkwood, There Will Be Blood, and Matewan, and at quirkier fare like A Is for Atom and Convoy, it argues that films have both reflected existing beliefs and conjured new visions for Americans about the role of energy in their lives and their history.
The essays in this collection show how film provides a unique and informative lens to understand perceptions of energy production, consumption, and infrastructure networks. By placing films that prominently feature energy within historical context and analyzing them as historical objects, the contributing authors demonstrate how energy systems of all kinds are both integral to the daily life of Americans and inextricable from larger societal changes and global politics.
À propos des auteurs :
Robert Lifset is the Donald Keith Jones Associate Professor of History in the Honors College at the University of Oklahoma and the author of Power on the Hudson: Storm King Mountain and the Emergence of Modern American Environmentalism. Raechel Lutz teaches history and civics at the Wardlaw+Hartridge School. Sarah Stanford-McIntyre is assistant professor of engineering, ethics, and society at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Revue de Presse :
"A rich and compelling collection of essays covering a broad range of moments and films in the histories of oil, coal, nuclear power, and energy in America."
Toby Jones, Rutgers University
"Movies are a fun escape from reality, cultural snapshots in time, and valuable historical documents. That’s the key thesis and value of this book: it gives readers an engaging way to learn the history of energy—rather, the history of American society—with a century of thrillers, dramas, comedies, and whodunits. Addressing a range of genres, story lines, and themes, this collection of essays will be captivating and informative for movie lovers, energy enthusiasts, and historians alike."
Michael E. Webber, host and creator of the PBS special Energy at the Movies
Voir le site internet de l'éditeur West Virginia University Press
> Sur un thème proche :
Consent Culture and Teen Films (2023)
Adolescent Sexuality in Us Movies
de Michele Meek
Sujet : Sociologie
Reborn of Crisis (2022)
9/11 and the Resurgent Superhero
de Annika Hagley et Michael Harrison
Sujet : Sociologie
From Dead Ends to Cold Warriors (2021)
Constructing American Boyhood in Postwar Hollywood Films
Sujet : Sociologie
Why Moralize upon It? (2020)
Democratic Education through American Literature and Film
de Brian Danoff
Sujet : Sociologie