American Disaster Movies of the 1970s

Regular price €36.50
A01=Scott Freer
acting
Airport
American
Author_Scott Freer
capitalism
Category=ATF
Category=FK
Category=FKC
Category=QD
civil rights
corporate power
counterculture
determinism
displaced populations
dystopian
eco-collapse
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethical criticism
evil
Golden age
human nature
modern tragedy
monstrosity
natural disasters
political
science
spectacle
suffering
technology
terrorist
The Towering Inferno
Vietnam
Watergate

Product details

  • ISBN 9781501375620
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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American Disaster Movies of the 1970s is the first scholarly book dedicated to the disaster cycle that dominated American cinema and television in the 1970s.

Through examining films such as Airport (1970), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Two-Minute Warning (1976) and The Swarm (1978), alongside their historical contexts and American contemporaneous trends, the disaster cycle is treated as a time-bound phenomenon. This book further contextualises the cycle by drawing on the longer cultural history of modernist reactions to modern anxieties, including the widespread dependence on technology and corporate power.

Each chapter considers cinematic precursors, such as the ‘ark movie’, and contemporaneous trends, such as New Hollywood, vigilante and blaxploitation films, as well as the immediate American context: the end of the civil rights and countercultural era, the Watergate crisis, and the defeat in Vietnam.As Scott Freer argues, the disaster movie is a modern, demotic form of tragedy that satisfies a taste for the macabre. It is also an aesthetic means for processing painful truths, and many of the dramatized themes anticipate present-day monstrosities of modernity.

Scott Freer is Associate Lecturer at the School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln, UK. His scholarly interests include 1970s cinema and the transmedia legacies of literary modernism. He is the author of Michael Caine: The Complete Cinema Career (2025).