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American Disaster Movies of the 1970s
Crisis, Spectacle and Modernity
American Disaster Movies of the 1970s
Crisis, Spectacle and Modernity
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Description
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.
Table of Contents
1. Purging the American Dream in the 1930s
2. Melodrama in high modernity: Airport (1970)
3: The dark carnivalesque: The Poseidon Adventure (1972)
4. Skyscraper apocalypticism: The Towering Inferno (1974)
5. Los Angeles – a 'convicted' city: Earthquake (1974), The Day of the Locust (1975), Smash-Up on Interstate 5 (1976)
6. Modern arenas of pleasure and violence: Rollercoaster (1977), Two-Minute Warning (1976), Black Sunday (1977)
7. Bee ecohorror: The Swarm (1978)
8. The destructive gaze: The Medusa Touch (1978)
9. Aftermath
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | 19 Oct 2023 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 272 |
| ISBN | 9781501336843 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 20 bw illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Disaster movies are an odd quantity because they turn mass suffering into spectacle in order to pass comment on the sins of society. Dr Freer is an energetic and engaging scholar. His account blends social history and theological framings of narrative to insightfully discuss not only the famous films of the 1970s cycle, but their real life and cinematic antecedents. The readings he comes up with in this intelligent guide to on-screen carnage are uniquely insightful.
Mark Duffett, Associate Professor of Music, Media and Performance, University of Chester, UK
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
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