The Drunken Journalist: The Biography of a Film StereotypeScarecrow Press, 2000 - 200 pages "No other human problem," a critic once remarked, "seems to have afflicted movie newspapermen more often than drinking." Howard Good's latest book analyzes the stereotype of the hard-drinking journalist, with the goal of discovering why it exists and how it operates in films. Early chapters consider whether there is a historical basis for the stereotype of the hard-drinking journalist;while later chapters deal with films from across the decades, including the 1980s and 1990s. They identify the fate of the romantic couple as a major--if not the major--concern of silent films featuring drunken journalists; explore the many and often conflicting meanings associated with drinking in the 1930s, the so-called "golden age of newspaper films"; and discuss the influence of Alcoholics Anonymous on such newspaper films of the 1940s and 1950s as Welcome Stranger and Come Fill the Cup. The concluding chapter points out that the dominant culture has frequently marginalized subgroups--for example, Native Americans and Irish immigrants--by stereotyping them as drunks, and theorizes that the stereotype of the hard-drinking journalist signals ambivalence not only about drinking, but also about the effects of the press on American life. Written in the clear, incisive style for which Good is known, this book offers illuminating new interpretations of classic newspaper films from The Front Page to All the President's Men. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the implications of popular culture for how we think and live. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 26
Page 9
... kind of authority over the imagination that the printed word once had . " Any description in words , or even any inert picture , " he said , " requires an effort of memory before a picture exists in the mind . But on the screen the ...
... kind of authority over the imagination that the printed word once had . " Any description in words , or even any inert picture , " he said , " requires an effort of memory before a picture exists in the mind . But on the screen the ...
Page 30
... kind of crossover between dry litera- ture and newspaper fiction . It grafted the temperance - tale concept of alcoholism as a gradual and progressive disease and the temperance- tale stereotype of the alcoholic as a skid row bum onto ...
... kind of crossover between dry litera- ture and newspaper fiction . It grafted the temperance - tale concept of alcoholism as a gradual and progressive disease and the temperance- tale stereotype of the alcoholic as a skid row bum onto ...
Page 91
... kind of love potion . After the wake , for example , a drunken Hutcheson shows up at his ex - wife's door with the idea of winning her back . She lets him in , but resists his sexual overtures . " You know what's the matter with you ...
... kind of love potion . After the wake , for example , a drunken Hutcheson shows up at his ex - wife's door with the idea of winning her back . She lets him in , but resists his sexual overtures . " You know what's the matter with you ...
Common terms and phrases
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