Foreword by Rick Altman ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction 1 1. Looking at Early Cinema in a New Light 9 2. The Emergence of the Kinematograph 32 3. Attraction and the Kinematograph 48 4. Intermediality and the Kinematograph 62 5. A Problematic Institutional Space 83 Conclusion 98 Appendix A: Discussion between 109 the Author and the Editors of the Journal 1895 Appendix B: ''Kinematographic Views'' 133 (1907) by Georges Melies, edited with an introduction and annotations by Jacques Malthete Notes 153 Works Cited in the Present Volume 177 General Bibliography on Early Cinema 185 Index 203
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
''...determinedly academic... [Gaudreault's] monograph is as much about historiography as about film, and his project is to persuade his professional colleagues to reconsider the first twenty years of film, roughly from 1890 to 1910, and to alter the way they have traditionally approached the period... It is thoughtful and provocative.'' Philip French, Times Literary Supplement ''A tour de force. The many historical references to specific uses of cinematic terms that are summoned by the author is impressive and can be accomplished only by a scholar with long and substantial experience working in the field. Books on film historiography as insightful, substantial, and concise as this one are rare.'' Charles O'Brien, author of Cinema's Conversion to Sound: Technology and Film Style in France and the U.S.