Description
The American Comic Book Industry and Hollywood provides examines the relationship between Hollywood and the U.S. comic book industry in the twenty-first century in terms of labor mobility, production cultures, organizational dynamics, intellectual property deployment, and digital distribution.
About the Author
Alisa Perren is Professor in the Department of Radio-Television-Film and Co-Director of the Center for Entertainment and Media Industries at The University of Texas at Austin. She is author of Indie, Inc.: Miramax and the Transformation of Hollywood in the 1990s (2012), co-editor of Media Industries: History, Theory, and Method (2009), and co-founder and editorial collective member of the journal Media Industries. Gregory Steirer is Associate Professor of English and Film Studies at Dickinson College. A former National Endowment for the Humanities fellow and researcher for the Carsey-Wolf Center's Media Industries Project, he has published extensively on digital media, comic books, and intellectual property law.
Reviews
The superhero team-up of Perren and Steirer reveals how the American comic book industry intersects with the world of film and television without losing focus on the unique business and creative culture that makes comics unique. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in how the 21st century comics business has-and has not-changed through its alliance with Hollywood. Yet students of film and television will find the book equally important as it reveals how those industries, too, might be transformed in turn by their relationship to comics. A must read for anyone interested in the amazing convergences, spectacular strategies, and uncanny mutations that define media industries. -- Derek Johnson, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
If you are looking for an analysis about how the comic book industry works in the twenty-first century and the connection between it and Hollywood then you will be richly rewarded by Perren and Steirer's meticulous and insightful book. -- Ian Gordon, National University of Singapore, Singapore
What Perren and Steirer have penned is long overdue, but arguably well-worth the wait. As the comic book industry continues to be exploited by Hollywood, the questions of impact and effect on both industries have grown ever more important. To those of us for whom comics is our passion as much as our livelihood, analysis of the relationship between the two is more important than ever. This is a relationship that will never be unmade, and understanding not just the tensions binding us together, but the dangers, isn't simply wise; it may be vital to the very survival of our medium. This is a work that every comic creator should study, and that comics publisher should learn, and that every Hollywood exec should, at the least, pretend they've read. -- Greg Rucka, creator of The Old Guard
An interesting and informative read for all those tinfoil-and-Super-8 kids in '70s and '80s who grew up watching half-heartedly made TV shows and movies about their favorite comic characters, thought they could do better, and went on not just to create comics, but also modern movies and TV inspired by them. For those interested in the secret origin of how Hollywood got super-powers, Perren and Steirer reveal all. -- Amanda Conner, comic book artist and illustrator
The book can also be used in dialogue with formal or narrative studies of contemporary superhero comics and films, or as an economic counterpoint to fan studies approaches. In any case, this is an undeniable success. * La Breche (Bloomsbury Translation) *
Book Information
ISBN 9781844579426
Author Alisa Perren
Format Hardback
Page Count 264
Imprint BFI Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Series International Screen Industries
Weight(grams) 588g