
Children, Cinema and Censorship : From Dracula to the Dead End Kids.
Title:
Children, Cinema and Censorship : From Dracula to the Dead End Kids.
Author:
Smith, Sarah.
ISBN:
9780857711328
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (254 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- General Editor's Introduction -- Acknowledgements -- 1. The Doom of a Generation? -- 2. How Bridget Served the Salad Undressed: The Regulation of Cinema 1895-1929 -- 3. It Ain't No Sin: The Regulation of Cinema 1929-1939 -- 4. Moral Panic or Flapdoodle? -- 5. Children as Censors -- 6. Matinees, Clubs and Children's Cinema Culture -- 7. Children and Cinema: Control and Resistance -- Appendix 1 -- Appendix 2 -- Appendix 3 -- Appendix 4 -- Appendix 5 -- Notes and References -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
Children have long been one of cinema's largest audiences yet, from its infancy, cinema has in the minds of moral watchdogs accompanied a succession of pastimes and new technologies as catalysts for juvenile delinquency. From 'penny dreadfuls' and comic books to television, 'video nasties' and computer games, and more recently, gangsta rap, mobile phones and the Internet - all have been seen as threats to children's safety, health, morality and literacy, and cinema is no exception. Writing with energy and wit and mobilising impressive original research, Sarah J. Smith explores recurring debates in Britain and America about children and how they use and respond to the media, focusing on a key example: the controversy and apparent moral panic surrounding children and cinema in its heyday, the 1930s. She shows how children colonised the cinema and established their own distinct cinema culture. And, considering films from "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" to "Scarface" and "King Kong", she explores attempts to control children's viewing, the underlying ideas that supported these approaches and the extent to which they were successful. Revealing the ways in which children subverted or circumvented official censorship - including the Hays Code and the British Board of Film Censors - she develops a challenging new proposition: that children were agents in the regulation of their own viewing, not simply passive consumers.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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