Description: Reading the Cinematograph: The Cinema in British Short Fiction 1896-1912 by Andrew Shail The birth of cinema coincided with the heyday of the short story. This book studies the relationship between popular magazine short stories and the very early British films. FORMAT Hardcover LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description stories and the very early British films. Author Biography Andrew Shail is Lecturer in Film at Newcastle University. Table of Contents Reading the Cinematograph: Introduction, Andrew ShailStory 1: Our Detective Story (24 January 1897) by Dagonet [George R. Sims]Chapter 1: George R. Sims and the Film as Evidence, Stephen BottomoreStory 2: The Awful Story of Heley Croft (20 May 1899) by A.S. AppelbeeChapter 2: Cinema Re-Mystified: A.S. Appelbees Technological Ghost Story, David Trotter and Chris ORourkeStory 3: Colonel Rankins Advertisement (December 1901) by Raymond RayneChapter 3: The Great American Kinetograph: News, Fakery and the Boer War, Andrew ShailStory 4: Mrs Bathurst (September 1904) by Rudyard KiplingChapter 4: "The Very Thing": Rudyard Kiplings Mrs Bathurst, Tom GunningStory 5: The Green Spider (October 1904) by A[rthur Henry] Sarsfield Ward, a.k.a. Sax RohmerChapter 5: Only from the Senses: Detection, Early Cinema and a Giant Green Spider, Stacy GillisStory 6: Romantic Lucy (Summer 1911) by Alphonse CourlanderChapter 6: "She Had So Many Appearances": Alphonse Courlander and the Birth of the Moving Picture Girl, Jon BurrowsStory 7: Love and the Bioscope: A Heart-Thrilling Story of a Deserted Bride (8 June 1912) by Mrs H.J. BickleChapter 7: Melodrama, Sensation and the Discourse of Modernity in Love and the Bioscope, Lise Shapiro SandersStory 8; The Sense of Touch (December 1912) by Ole Luk-Oie [Ernest Dunlop Swinton]Chapter 8: A visit to the cinema in 1912: The Sense of Touch, Andrew Higson Review As entertaining as it is edifying, Reading the Cinematograph showcases the transformative presence - and role - of cinema in British short fiction at the turn of the twentieth century. Andrew Shail has devised a marvelous format for the occasion; eight stories, reprinted in full and accompanied by their original illustration, followed by valuable critical commentary by eminent film scholars, and framed by Shails indispensable historical/ critical introduction and sure editorial hand. A work of impeccable and imaginative scholarship...Maria DiBattista, Professor of English and Chair of the Film Studies Committee, Princeton University, and author of Fast Talking Dames (Yale UP) `... the volume sustains an unbroken fascination with the wider implications of emergent cinematic technologies and modes of representation. It accurately reflects the widely felt cultural significances that were attributed to moving pictures and therefore will be valuable reading for cultural historians of the period as well as historians of cinema. (Victorian Studies. Volume 54, No. 5, Summer 2012) Review Text "As entertaining as it is edifying, Reading the Cinematograph showcases the transformative presence - and role - of cinema in British short fiction at the turn of the twentieth century. Andrew Shail has devised a marvelous format for the occasion; eight stories, reprinted in full and accompanied by their original illustration, followed by valuable critical commentary by eminent film scholars, and framed by Shails indispensable historical/ critical introduction and sure editorial hand. A work of impeccable and imaginative scholarship..." Maria DiBattista, Professor of English and Chair of the Film Studies Committee, Princeton University, and author of Fast Talking Dames (Yale UP) "... the volume sustains an unbroken fascination with the wider implications of emergent cinematic technologies and modes of representation. It accurately reflects the widely felt cultural significances that were attributed to moving pictures and therefore will be valuable reading for cultural historians of the period as well as historians of cinema." (Victorian Studies. Volume 54, No. 5, Summer 2012) Details ISBN0859898539 Publisher University of Exeter Press Series University of Exeter Press - Exeter Studies in History Language English ISBN-10 0859898539 ISBN-13 9780859898539 Media Book Format Hardcover Author Andrew Shail Imprint University of Exeter Press Place of Publication Exeter Country of Publication United Kingdom Edited by Andrew Shail Illustrations 40 b&w illustrations Pages 298 Short Title READING THE CINEMATOGRAPH DEWEY 823.01093579 Year 2011 Publication Date 2011-02-01 Subtitle The Cinema in British Short Fiction, 1896-1912 UK Release Date 2011-02-01 AU Release Date 2011-02-01 NZ Release Date 2011-02-01 We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:137245296;
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ISBN-13: 9780859898539
Book Title: Reading the Cinematograph: the Cinema in British Short Fiction, 1896-1912
Item Height: 234mm
Item Width: 156mm
Author: Dr. Andrew Shail
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Topic: Literature, Short Stories, History
Publisher: Chris O'Rourke, Stacy Gillis, David Trotter, Tom Gunning, Prof. Andrew Higson, Lise Shapiro Sanders, Jon Burrows, Stephen Bottomore, University of Exeter Press
Publication Year: 2011
Type: Textbook
Number of Pages: 336 Pages