Reclaiming the Archive: Feminism and Film History

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Vicki Callahan
Wayne State University Press, 2010 - 460 pages

Illustrates the rich relationship between film history and feminist theory.

Reclaiming the Archive: Feminism and Film History brings together a diverse group of international feminist scholars to examine the intersections of feminism, history, and feminist theory in film. Editor Vicki Callahan has assembled essays that reflect a range of methodological approaches--including archival work, visual culture, reception studies, biography, ethno-historical studies, historiography, and textual analysis--by a diverse group of film and media studies scholars to prove that feminist theory, film history, and social practice are inevitably and productively intertwined.

Essays in Reclaiming the Archive investigate the different models available in feminist film history and how those feminist strategies might serve as paradigmatic for other sites of feminist intervention. Chapters have an international focus and range chronologically from early cinema to post-feminist texts, organized around the key areas of reception, stars, and authorship. A final section examines the very definitions of feminism (post-feminism), cinema (transmedia), and archives (virtual and online) in place today.

The essays in Reclaiming the Archive prove that a significant heritage of film studies lies in the study of feminism in film and feminist film theory. Scholars of film history and feminist studies will appreciate the breadth of work in this volume.

 

Contents

Feminist Film Theory
17
Lois Weber Star Maker
131
Ayako Saito
154
Geneviève Sellier
176
Victoria Duckett
193
Yvonne Tasker
213
Mercedes de Acostas
231
Excavating Early Cinema
259
Women Screenwriters
289
Amy Shore
309
of Germaine Dulac and Virginia Woolf
345
Constructing a Postfeminist Future
359
HighTech
384
Soyoung
399
Contributors
431
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About the author (2010)

Vicki Callahan is associate professor at the Peck School of the Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and visiting faculty at the Institute for Multimedia Literacy at the University of Southern California. She is the author of Zones of Anxiety: Movement, Musidora, and the Crime Serials of Louis Feuillade (Wayne State University Press, 2004).

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