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Birth of the American Horror Film

Contributor(s): Rhodes, Gary D (Author)

ISBN: 9781474430869

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

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Pub Date: January 15, 2018

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.00" H x 9.50" L x 6.70" W ( 1.65 lbs) 432 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: The Birth of the American Horror Film examines a history that begins in colonial Salem, taking an interdisciplinary approach to explore the influence of horror-themed literature, theatre and visual culture in America, and how that context established an amorphous structural foundation for films produced between 1895 and 1915.

Brief description: Gary D. Rhodes is Professor of Media, Oklahoma Baptist University. He is the author of Emerald Illusions: The Irish in Early American Cinema (2012), The Perils of Moviegoing in America (2012), and The Birth of the American Horror Film (2018). He is a founding editor of Horror Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal. Rhodes is also the writer-director of the documentary films Lugosi: Hollywood's Dracula (1997) and Banned in Oklahoma (2004).

Review Quotes: In a remarkable work of historical research, Gary Rhodes provides what must certainly be the definitive study of the origins of the horror film genre. First, he traces the manifestations of "horror-themed" material well back into the 18th century, considering literature, theater, graphic arts, freak shows, lurid news stories--anything likely to raise a thrill of horror. He then turns to early cinema--the peep shows, the nickelodeons--covering its development from 1895 to 1915. Most popular of the horror figures were witches, ghosts, and devils, but almost all future familiar frights were represented--vampires, werewolves, mummies, monsters, mad scientists, mesmerists, somnambulists, aliens, sinister "others." The only horror missing from the period was the zombie. Rhodes also enumerates the films based on the works of Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and--especially--Edgar Allan Poe. The sheer volume of films produced is astonishing. Most are lost, of course, but Rhodes does a magnificent job of resurrecting them, using advertising copy, publicity stills, trade magazines, and film criticism to recuperate plots and some notion of style.--W. A. Vincent, Michigan State University "CHOICE"

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