
The Oxford Handbook of Children's Film
Series: Oxford Handbooks;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 8 July 2022
- ISBN 9780190939359
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages896 pages
- Size 173x244x53 mm
- Weight 1610 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 85 halftones 277
Categories
Short description:
The Oxford Handbook of Children's Film offers a uniquely comprehensive study of children's cinema from an interdisciplinary, nuanced, global perspective.
MoreLong description:
The Oxford Handbook of Children's Film is the most comprehensive study of international children's cinema published to date. Overturning common prejudices that films for children are unworthy of serious attention, it presents nuanced and wide-ranging discussions from senior and junior scholars alike of iconic and neglected productions from Hollywood, Britain, France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Hungary, Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Iran, Kenya, and several other countries. Featuring contributions by leading scholars in the field, the volume considers a range of issues central to the study of children's film, including questions of form and definition; representations of childhood and growing up; music, stardom, and performance; how children's films reflect national identity or serve as vehicles of state ideology and propaganda; the phenomenon of Hollywood 'family entertainment', especially the role of the Disney company; and how children and young people (as well as older audiences) engage with children's film culture. As a whole, the volume makes a substantial contribution to the emerging field of children's film studies, and will be of great interest to scholars of children's media and culture more broadly.
MoreTable of Contents:
List of Illustration
About the Contributors
Introduction: Coming to Terms with Children's Film, Noel Brown
Part I.ENGenre and Form
1. Exploring Cultural and Social Differences in Defining a Children's Film, Becky Parry
2. Screening Innocence in Children's Film, Debbie Olson
3. Screen Adaptations of The Wizard of Oz and Metafilmicity in Children's Film, Ryan Bunch
4. Children's Films and the Avant-Garde, Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer
5. Intertextuality and "Adult" Humour in Children's Film, Sam Summers
6. Children's Film and the Problematic "Happy Ending," Noel Brown
Part IIENChildren, Childhood, and Growing Up
7. The Cop and the Kid in 1930s American Film, Pamela Robertson Wojcik
8. History, Forbidden Games, Children's Play, and Trauma Theory, Ian Wojcik-Andrews
9. Changing Conceptions of Childhood in the Work of the Children's Film Foundation, Robert Shail
10. Migrant Children and the "Space Between" in the Films of Angelopoulos, Stephanie Hemelryk Donald
11. Iranian Cinema and a World through the Eyes of a Child, John Stephens
12. The American Tween and Contemporary Hollywood Cinema, Timothy Shary
13. Growing Up on Scandinavian Screens, Anders Lysne
Part IIIENChildren's Film and Performance
14. Mary Pickford, Alma Taylor, and Girlhood in Early Hollywood and British Cinema, Matthew Smith
15. Craft and Play in Lotte Reiniger's Fairy-Tale Films, Caroline Ruddell
16. Disney's Musical Landscapes, Daniel Batchelder
17. Hayley Mills and the Disneyfication of Childhood, David Buckingham
18. Danny Kaye as Children's Film Star, Bruce Babington
19. Real Animals and the Problem of Anthropomorphism in Children's Film, Claudia Alonso-Recarte and Ignacio Ramos-Gay
Part IVENChildren's Cinema, Society, and National Identity
20. Nation, Identity, and the Larrikin Streak in Australian Children's Cinema, Adrian Schober
21. Nationalism in Swedish Children's Film and the Case of Astrid Lindgren, Anders Wilhelm ?berg
22. Unreality, Fantasy, and the Anti-fascist Politics of the Children's Films of Satyajit Ray, Koel Banerjee
23. Gender, Ideology, and Nationalism in Chinese Children's Cinema, Yuhan Huang
24. Ethnic and Racial Difference in the Hungarian Animated Features Macskafogó/Cat City (1986) and Macskafogó 2/Cat City 2 (2007), Gábor Gergely
25. Negotiating East and West When Representing Childhood in Miyazaki's Spirited Away, Katherine Whitehurst
26. Coming of Age in South Korean Cinema, Sung-Ae Lee
Part V.ENHollywood and Family Audiences
27. The Walt Disney Company, Family Entertainment, and Global Movie Hits, Peter Krämer
28. Reading Jason and the Argonauts as a Children's Film, Susan Smith
29. Hollywood and the Baby Boom Audience in the 1950s and 1960s, James Russell
30. Don Bluth and the Disney Renaissance, Peter C. Kunze
31. On "Love Experts," Evil Princes, Gullible Princesses, and Frozen, Amy M. Davis
32. Hollywood, Regulation, and the "Disappearing" Children's Film, Filipa Antunes
Part VI. Audiences, Engagement, and Participatory Culture
33. How Children Learn to "Read" Movies, Cary Bazalgette
34. Star Wars, Children's Film Culture, and Fan Paratexts, Lincoln Geraghty
35. Norwegian Tween Girls and Everyday Life through Disney Tween Franchises, Ingvild Kvale S?renssen
36. A Multimethod Study on Contemporary Young Audiences and Their Film/Cinema Discourses and Practices in Flanders, Belgium, Aleit Veenstra, Philippe Meers, and Daniël Biltereyst
37. An Empirical Report on Young People's Responses to Adult Fantasy Films, Martin Barker
38. Disney's Adult Audiences, James R. Mason
Index