Entertainment Books:

Forgotten Futures: British Municipal Cinema 1920-1980

Click to share your rating 0 ratings (0.0/5.0 average) Thanks for your vote!

Format:

Paperback / softback
Unavailable
Sorry, this product is not currently available to order

Description

The first book on municipal cinema in Britain, Forgotten Future includes films from the Department for Public Health, documentaries and local authority films, and is written by film and cultural historian Elizabeth Lebas. The title explores filmmaking by local authorities in Britain, outlining their activities and focuses on the impact of city environments and reforms on society. From the 1920s until a decade after the Second World War, British municipalities not only controlled commercial screenings and cinemas, but also almost all projected and rental non-commercial films. Forgotten Futures examines municipal cinema as a filmic representation of urban and social reform in twentieth century Britain by looking at the relationship to documentary and educational cinema, the influence of the nineteenth century documentary photography and traditional forms of popular culture. It is the first book on municipal cinema in Britain and examines new perspectives on documentary photography, film and art. The book explains why municipal films were more than simple propaganda and what their influence is in the making of the social democratic model of modern British everyday urban life. There's a closer look into the activities of the Glasgow Corporation and the Bermondsey Borough Council: two socialist municipalities who promoted their political identities through their making and sponsorship of films over several decades. Although the Glasgow Corporation was the first local authority in Britain to commission a film of its activities, Bermondsey Borough Council was the first to make its own films. Between 1922 and 1956 Bermondsey Borough Council produced 39 films as part of a campaign of public health and personal hygiene and as an advertisement for its achievements and services. Subjects varied from the care of teeth, the cleanliness of the body, the physical and moral risks of hop picking to childcare, public gardens and the management of tuberculosis. The films were shown for free in town halls, clinics, schools, youth clubs, working-men's clubs, political associations and trade unions. The professionally made imageries of the Glasgow Corporation represent the city's evolution from its status as 'Second City of the Empire' to a post-war form of Scottish identity. The book finishes with a look at imagery of social reform that begins in the late nineteenth century, sources of authority present in the films' images of everyday life and ordinary people in relation to their institutional legitimacy. It argues the necessity of understanding these films on their own, within their own historical and political contexts as documents of their time. AUTHOR: Elizabeth Lebas was brought up in Quebec City. She is a Senior Lecturer in the History of Art and Architecture at Middlesex University as well as Senior Tutor at the Architectural Association. She is the co-author of Henri Lefebre: Key Writings, editor of Writing on Cities and contributed on many books on cities, architecture and art. 187 colour & b/w illustrations *

Author Biography

Elizabeth Michelle Lebas is a reader in visual culture, a senior research appointment that includes teaching interior architecture students. Besides degrees in political studies, she has a post-graduate diploma in history and conservation of landscapes, parks and gardens from the Architectural Association, where for twenty years she taught in the Housing and Urbanism and later in the History and Conservation of Parks and Gardens graduate programs. Her interests are in urbanism: presenting contemporary theory, examining the role of women in the British public landscape, and researching the filmic representation of modern urban reform. In 2004, she was Garden Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks; in 2005, she received a visiting fellowship from the Society of Architectural Historians to present her work on municipal cinema at its annual conference; and in 2008, she received a research support grant from the Paul Mellon Centre for British Studies to complete archival research on this topic.
Release date Australia
June 14th, 2011
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Country of Publication
United Kingdom
Imprint
Black Dog Publishing Ltd
Pages
192
Publisher
Black Dog Press
Dimensions
220x260x15
ISBN-13
9781906155940
Product ID
6705736

Customer reviews

Nobody has reviewed this product yet. You could be the first!

Write a Review

Marketplace listings

There are no Marketplace listings available for this product currently.
Already own it? Create a free listing and pay just 9% commission when it sells!

Sell Yours Here

Help & options

Filed under...