Shots in the Mirror
Autor: | Rafter, Nicole Hahn |
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EAN: | 9780195175066 |
Sachgruppe: | Kunst |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Seitenzahl: | 284 |
Produktart: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Veröffentlichungsdatum: | 01.05.2006 |
Untertitel: | Crime Films and Society |
Schlagworte: | Fernsehen - Privatfernsehen TV |
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Movies play a central role in shaping our understanding of crime and the world generally, helping us define what is good and bad, desirable and unworthy, lawful and illicit, strong and weak. Crime films raise controversial issues about the distribution of social power and the meanings ofdeviance, and they provide a safe space for fantasies of rebellion, punishment, and the restoration of order. In the first comprehensive study of its kind, well-known criminologist Nicole Rafter examines the relationship between society and crime films from the perspectives of criminal justice, film history and technique, and sociology. Shots in the Mirror begins with an overview of the history of crimefilms and the emergence of various genres, surveying important films from the silent era, the early gangster films of the '30s, classic film noir, the work of Hitchcock, and recent innovations by Scorsese, Tarrentino, and the Coen brothers. Keeping pace with the evolution of crime films, Shots in the Mirror has been updated to respond to recent developments, trends, and shifting circumstances in the genre. This new edition expands the scope and increases the depth and variety of the previous edition by including foreign films inaddition to American movies. Rafter also integrates an entirely new body of literature into the study, reflecting the rapid expansion of scholarship on law-related films over the past three years. She has added a chapter on psycho movies, a previously unrecognized subcategory of crime films. Anothernew chapter, "The Alternative Tradition and Films of Moral Ambiguity," focuses on recent sex crime films. This new final chapter grows organically out of the firstedition's distinction between traditional crime films, with their easy solutions to social problems, and those more unusual criticalfilms which belong to the bleaker, morally ambiguous, alternative tradition. Rafter examines more than three hundred films in this st