Description
Drawing on first-hand research with over 1000 people, Cinema Memories is a detailed and frequently surprising history of what it was like to go to the cinema in the 1960s.
About the Author
Melvyn Stokes is Professor of Film History at University College London, UK. He is the author and editor of books including Charlot: How the French Discovered, Wrote About, Defended and Resurrected Charlie Chaplin (Oxford University Press, 2018); Cinema et memoire dans le cinema Anglophone/Memory in-of English-speaking Cinema, ed. (with Z. Saleh) (Michel Houdiard, 2014); American History through Hollywood Film (Bloomsbury, December 2013); Gilda (BFI Film Classics, 2010); Cinema et histoire/Cinema and History, ed. (with G. Menegaldo) (Michel Houdiard, 2008); D.W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation": A History of "the Most Controversial Motion Picture of All Time" (Oxford University Press, 2007); Going to the Movies: Hollywood and the Social Experience of Cinema, ed. (with R. Maltby and R. C. Allen) (University of Exeter Press, 2007); and Hollywood Abroad: Audiences and Cultural Exchange, ed. (with R. Maltby) (British Film Institute, 2004). Matthew Jones is Senior Lecturer in Cinema and Television History, De Montfort University, UK. He is the author of Science Fiction Cinema and 1950s Britain (Bloomsbury, 2017). Emma Pett is Lecturer in Film Consumption at the University of East Anglia, UK. She has published articles in journals including The Journal of British Cinema and Television and in edited books.
Reviews
This research is an excellent reminder of the importance of the cinema experience in that culturally significant decade ... and it also serves to point out just how much has changed over the last fifty years ... [The book] may provoke nostalgia in some older readers, whilst for younger readers it's a fascinating window into an almost lost world. * Cinema Retro Magazine *
Cinema Memories paints a fascinating portrait of the place of cinema in the lives and imaginations of its British audiences in the 1960s. Based on an extensive collection of interviews and questionnaires, it makes a vivid contribution both to the social history of the period and to the rapidly developing field of memory studies. -- Richard Maltby, Flinders University, Australia
Cinema Memories maps exciting and accessible new routes through the spaces and places of 1960s cinema and social history in Britain. It deftly connects New Cinema History's methodological emphasis on empirical contexts of cinema-going and film reception with intellectual traditions grounded in British Cultural Studies and People's History. -- Jeffrey Klenotic, University of New Hampshire, USA
Book Information
ISBN 9781839025297
Author Melvyn Stokes
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint BFI Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC