Welcome to Fear City

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A01=Nathan Holmes
Author_Nathan Holmes
Category=ATFA
Category=JBSD
Category=NHK
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781438471204
  • Weight: 331g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: State University of New York Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Analyzes how location-shot crime films of the 1970s reflected and influenced understandings of urban crisis.

2019 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title

The early 1970s were a moment of transformation for both the American city and its cinema. As intensified suburbanization, racial division, deindustrialization, and decaying infrastructure cast the future of the city in doubt, detective films, blaxploitation, police procedurals, and heist films confronted spectators with contemporary scenes from urban streets. Welcome to Fear City argues that the location-shot crime films of the 1970s were part of a larger cultural ambivalence felt toward urban life, evident in popular magazines, architectural discourse, urban sociology, and visual culture. Yet they also helped to reinvigorate the city as a site of variegated experience and a positively disordered public life-in stark contrast to the socially homogenous and spatially ordered suburbs. Discussing the design of parking garages and street lighting, the dynamics of mugging, panoramas of ruin, and the optics of undercover police operations in such films as Klute, The French Connection, Detroit 9000, Death Wish, and The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, Nathan Holmes demonstrates that crime genres did not simply mirror urban settings and social realities, but actively produced and circulated new ideas about the shifting surfaces of public culture.

Nathan Holmes is a New York–based scholar and teacher, with a PhD in film and media studies from the University of Chicago.

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