Nashville

Regular price €18.50
1970s cinema
A01=Heather Hendershot
American society
anti-hero
Author_Heather Hendershot
Category=ATFA
Category=ATFB
Category=ATFG
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Heather Hendershot
interpersonal connection
Martin Scorsese
Nashville
New Hollywood
pessimism
Peter Bogdanovich
political satire
post-censorship
Robert Altman
societal exhaustion
Vietnam War
Watergate

Product details

  • ISBN 9781839028946
  • Weight: 167g
  • Dimensions: 134 x 188mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Robert Altman’s Nashville (1975) is simultaneously an intimate film about interpersonal connection and disconnection, and a sprawling, meandering portrait of American societal exhaustion in the wake of Vietnam, Watergate and a spate of political assassinations. Despite its pessimistic, satirical viewpoint, the film suggests a carefully guarded optimism: ‘life may be a one-way street’, but one has no choice but to ‘keep a’ goin’.

Heather Hendershot places Nashville in the context of the New Hollywood of the 1970s, which offered a post-censorship anti-hero, the perennial loser. Embracing the new pessimism, Altman’s work fits with those of contemporaries such as Martin Scorsese and Peter Bogdanovich, but it also stands apart for its innovative sound design, improvisatory drive, and loose genre commitments.

Through a close reading of the five days over which the film takes place, Hendershot unpacks both its political dynamics and the characters’ interrelationships and motivations. She highlights Nashville’s criticism of the suffering of its female characters, an engagement that springs from Joan Tewkesbury’s screenplay, Altman’s sensitivity to gendered exploitation (here, if not in all of his pictures), and the role the performers themselves played by improvising and scripting some of their own material.

Heather Hendershot is Cardiss Collins Professor of Communication Studies and Journalism at Northwestern University, USA. She has authored numerous books, including Open to Debate: How William F. Buckley Put Liberal America on the Firing Line (2016) and When the News Broke: Chicago 1968 and the Polarizing of America (2022), as well essays on films ranging from The Creature from the Black Lagoon to Dog Day Afternoon.