Description
Understanding second wave exploitation filmmaking as a transitory space for the industrial development of contemporary Hollywood that also opened up opportunities for women practitioners, Kozma argues that understudied film production cycles provide untapped spaces for discovering women's directorial work. The professional career and filmography of Rothman exemplify this claim. Rothman also serves as an apt example for connecting the structure of film histories to the persistent strictures of rhetorical language used to mark women filmmakers and their labor. Kozma traces these imbrications across historical archives.
Adopting a diverse methodological approach, The Cinema of Stephanie Rothman shines a needed spotlight on the problems and successes of the memorialization of women's directorial labor, connecting historical and contemporary patterns of gendered labor disparity in the film industry. This book is simultaneously the first in-depth scholarly consideration of Rothman, the debut of the most substantive archival materials collected on Rothman, and a feminist political intervention into the construction of film histories.
About the Author
Alicia Kozma is director of the Indiana University Cinema. She holds a PhD from the Institute of Communication Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is coauthor of Refocus: The Films of Doris Wishman and Mobilized Identities: Mediated Subjectivity and Cultural Crisis in the Neoliberal Era, and her work has been published in Media Industries, Film Comment, Camera Obscura, Television and New Media, and other publications.
Book Information
ISBN 9781496840998
Author Alicia Kozma
Format Hardback
Page Count 280
Imprint University Press of Mississippi
Publisher University Press of Mississippi
Weight(grams) 363g