Hollywood has a growing fascination with America’s past. This is evidenced in the release of a rash of films of this genre in the past 25 years. This book offers an analysis of how and why contemporary Hollywood films have sought to mediate American history. It is the first book to explore, comprehensively, the post-Cold War period of film-making, and to consider whether or how far contemporary films have begun to unravel the unifying myths of earlier films and periods. It also considers why such films are becoming increasingly integral to the ambitions of a globally-focused American film industry.The relationship between film and history - the way in which film mediates history and vice versa - is a complex one. In this book, the authors work from two main assumptions. First, that films revision events to challenge or, perhaps more typically, to reaffirm traditional historical interpretations. Second, that this process can only be understood in the context of contemporary debates about identity politics, America’s role in world affairs, and the globalisation of the American film business. The book is structured by historical periods and includes chapters on:• The American Revolution (Revolution, The Patriot) • Slavery (Roots, Amistad)• The Civil War (Gettysburg,Glory,Ride with the Devil, Cold Mountain)• World War II (Saving Private Ryan, Thin Red Line, Pearl Harbor) • Oliver Stone and the Decade of Trauma (Platoon, Born on the Fourth of July, Heaven and Earth, Nixon)• Civil Rights and Black Nationalism (Panther, Mississippi Burning, The Hurricane, Malcolm X, Ali)• American Interventionism (Three Kings, Black Hawk Down)Key Features:• Unique: the only book to provide comprehensive analysis of the relationship between film and American history in the post-Cold War era• Topical: ex
Trevor McCrisken is Lecturer in American Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick. Author of American Exceptionalism and the Legacy of Vietnam: US Foreign Policy since 1974 (Palgrave, 2003).
CONTENTS; Acknowledgements; Preface; American History and Contemporary Hollywood Film: Introduction; 1. Lessons from Hollywood's American Revolution; Revolution; The Patriot; 2. Rattling the Chains of History: Steven Spielberg's Amistad and Telling Everyone's Story; Roots; Amistad; 3. Hollywood's Civil War Dilemma: To Imagine or Unravel the Nation?; Gettysberg; Glory; Ride with the Devil; Cold Mountain; 4. Saving the Good War: Hollywood and World War II in the Post-Cold War World; Saving Private Ryan; The Thin Red Line; U-571; Pearl Harbor; 5. Oliver Stone and the Decade of Trauma; Platoon; Born on the Fourth of July; Heaven and Earth; JFK; Nixon; 6. From Civil Rights to Black Nationalism: Hollywood vs. Black America?; Panther; Mississippi Burning; The Hurricane; Malcolm X; Ali; 7. Hollywood's Post-Cold War History: The Righteousness of American Interventionism; Three Kings; Black Hawk Down; Selected Bibliography.
Scholars who explore the relationship between film and history generally adopt one of two approaches: they write about film on history or they write about history on film. Trevor McCrisken and Andrew Pepper manage to combine the two approaches in a succinct and disciplined book that is intended for a broad audience. The authors deftly manage to present Hollywood dramas as cultural products of their time and simultaneously reflect on how various filmic interpretations of America's past contrbute to shaping and extending the historical record itself… the book will undoubtedly find a place in the expanding canon of works on American history and Hollywood film.