Cinema in the Phase of Private Interest

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Abstract

There is a conception in American science that the life of the American society complies with the algorithm of moods and interests. This pattern is reflected in the cinema which records the swing from "private interest" to "social unrest". The article investigates the phase of the "private interest" of 1918 - 1929, the "jazz" or "prosperity" era and is centered on analyzing the films Why Change Your Wife? (1919, Cecil Blount DeMille) and It (1927, Clarence J. Badger) with Clara Bow, the queen flapper, who has been ignored by Russian film scholars.

About the authors

Dmitriy Vladislavovich Zakharov

VGIK

аспирант кафедры киноведения; ВГИК; VGIK

References

  1. Berkin C., Miller C., Cherny R., Gormly J., Egerton D. Making America. A History of the United States. - Boston, 2001.
  2. Cooper M.G. Love Rules. Silent Hollywood and the Rise of the Managerial Class. -University of Minnesota Press. Minneapolis, London, 2003.
  3. Currell S. American Culture in the 1920s. -Edinburgh, 2009.
  4. McCaffrey D.W., Jacobs Ch. P. Guide to the Silent Years of American Cinema. -Greenwood Press Westport, Connecticut, London, 1999.
  5. Кайзерлинг Г. Америка. Заря Нового мира. - СПб.: Санкт-Петербургское философское общество, 2002.
  6. Шлезингер А. Циклы американской истории. - М.: Издательская группа «Прогресс», «Прогресс-Академия», 1992.

Supplementary files

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Copyright (c) 1970 Zakharov D.V.



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