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Hollywood''s Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the World

English

By (author): Ross Melnick

Winner - 2022 Richard Wall Memorial Award, Theatre Library Association

Beginning in the 1920s, audiences around the globe were seduced not only by Hollywood films but also by lavish movie theaters that were owned and operated by the major American film companies. These theaters aimed to provide a quintessentially American experience. Outfitted with American technology and accoutrements, they allowed local audiences to watch American films in an American-owned cinema in a distinctly American way.

In a history that stretches from Buenos Aires and Tokyo to Johannesburg and Cairo, Ross Melnick considers these movie houses as cultural embassies. He examines how the exhibition of Hollywood films became a constant flow of political and consumerist messaging, selling American ideas, products, and power, especially during fractious eras. Melnick demonstrates that while Hollywoods marketing of luxury and consumption often struck a chord with local audiences, it was also frequently tone-deaf to new social, cultural, racial, and political movements. He argues that the story of Hollywoods global cinemas is not a simple narrative of cultural and industrial indoctrination and colonization. Instead, it is one of negotiation, booms and busts, successes and failures, adoptions and rejections, and a precursor to later conflicts over the spread of American consumer culture. A truly global account, Hollywoods Embassies shows how the entanglement of worldwide movie theaters with American empire offers a new way of understanding film history and the history of U.S. soft power. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780231201513

About Ross Melnick

Ross Melnick is professor of film and media studies at the University of California Santa Barbara. He is the author of American Showman: Samuel Roxy Rothafel and the Birth of the Entertainment Industry 19081935 (Columbia 2012) and coeditor of Rediscovering U.S. Newsfilm: Cinema Television and the Archive (2018).

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