Chromatic Modernity - Sarah Street, Joshua Yumibe

Chromatic Modernity

Color, Cinema, and Media of the 1920s
Buch | Hardcover
368 Seiten
2019
Columbia University Press (Verlag)
978-0-231-17982-9 (ISBN)
109,70 inkl. MwSt
Sarah Street and Joshua Yumibe provide a revelatory history of how the use of color in film led the way in creating a chromatically vibrant culture. Focusing on the final decade of silent film, Chromatic Modernity portrays the 1920s as a pivotal and profoundly chromatic period of cosmopolitan exchange, collaboration, and experimentation.
The era of silent film, long seen as black and white, has been revealed in recent scholarship as bursting with color. Yet the 1920s remain thought of as a transitional decade between early cinema and the rise of Technicolor—despite the fact that new color technologies used in film, advertising, fashion, and industry reshaped cinema and consumer culture. In Chromatic Modernity, Sarah Street and Joshua Yumibe provide a revelatory history of how the use of color in film during the 1920s played a key role in creating a chromatically vibrant culture.

Focusing on the final decade of silent film, Street and Yumibe portray the 1920s as a pivotal and profoundly chromatic period of cosmopolitan exchange, collaboration, and experimentation in and around cinema. Chromatic Modernity explores contemporary debates over color’s artistic, scientific, philosophical, and educational significance. It examines a wide range of European and American films, including Opus 1 (1921), L’Inhumaine (1923), Die Nibelungen (1924), The Phantom of the Opera (1925), The Lodger (1927), Napoléon (1927), and Dracula (1932). A comprehensive, comparative study that situates film among developments in art, color science, and industry, Chromatic Modernity reveals the role of color cinema in forging new ways of looking at and experiencing the modern world.

Sarah Street is professor of film at the University of Bristol. She is the author of Colour Films in Britain: The Negotiation of Innovation, 1900–55 (2012) and Deborah Kerr (2018), among other works. Joshua Yumibe is associate professor and director of the Film Studies Program at Michigan State University. He is the author of Moving Color: Early Film, Mass Culture, Modernism (2012) and coauthor of Fantasia of Color in Early Cinema (2015).

Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Color Standards and the Industrial Field of Film
2. Advertising, Fashion, and Color
3. Synthetic Dreams: Expanded Spaces of Cinema
4. Color in the Art and Avant-Garde of the 1920s
5. Chromatic Hybridity
6. Color and the Coming of Sound
7. Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Film and Culture Series
Zusatzinfo 120 illustrations
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Film / TV
ISBN-10 0-231-17982-0 / 0231179820
ISBN-13 978-0-231-17982-9 / 9780231179829
Zustand Neuware
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