Gendering Science Fiction Films: Invaders from the Suburbs

Author:   S. George
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN:  

9781137321572


Pages:   193
Publication Date:   21 November 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Gendering Science Fiction Films: Invaders from the Suburbs


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Full Product Details

Author:   S. George
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   3.648kg
ISBN:  

9781137321572


ISBN 10:   1137321571
Pages:   193
Publication Date:   21 November 2013
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Gendering Science Fiction Films reminds us that marginalized films, such as science fiction invasion films, are a rich site for cultural conversations about weighty social issues. Taking for granted that depictions of women are central to the genre, George's cogent analysis helps us see how in the 1950s these films often used genre conventions against themselves in order to address and challenge conflicting gendered concepts such as momism, female desire, and a bread-winner masculinity. - Sarah Projansky, Associate Dean and Professor of Film and Media Arts and Gender Studies, University of Utah, USA Susan A. George is exceptionally knowledgeable and remarkably perceptive about films that almost everyone interested in movies has seen, but that few have recognized as culturally significant. By detailing both the SF silver screen's adherence to and resistance toward the dominant American ideologies of the Cold War era, George has created a thought-provoking, well researched work that is a must-have for college libraries, cinema scholars, and science fiction fans alike! - Mary F. Pharr, Professor Emeritus, English, Florida Southern College, USA, and co-editor of Of Bread, Blood and The Hunger Games: Critical Essays on the Suzanne Collins Trilogy Gendering Science Fiction Films offers many insights into the formative period of a genre that today is technological culture's most important forum, while reminding us of the varied voices that always speak through our films. Using science fiction 'invasion' films of the 1950s as a lens, George's book reveals the subtle ways in which alternative attitudes and values have frequently been articulated and, in the process, joins with the films it describes in doing important cultural work - J. P. Telotte, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA


Gendering Science Fiction Films reminds us that marginalized films, such as science fiction invasion films, are a rich site for cultural conversations about weighty social issues. Taking for granted that depictions of women are central to the genre, George's cogent analysis helps us see how in the 1950s these films often used genre conventions against themselves in order to address and challenge conflicting gendered concepts such as momism, female desire, and a bread-winner masculinity. - Sarah Projansky, Associate Dean and Professor of Film and Media Arts and Gender Studies, University of Utah, USA Susan A. George is exceptionally knowledgeable and remarkably perceptive about films that almost everyone interested in movies has seen, but that few have recognized as culturally significant. By detailing both the SF silver screen's adherence to and resistance toward the dominant American ideologies of the Cold War era, George has created a thought-provoking, well researched work that is a must-have for college libraries, cinema scholars, and science fiction fans alike! - Mary F. Pharr, Professor Emeritus, English, Florida Southern College, USA, and co-editor of Of Bread, Blood and The Hunger Games: Critical Essays on the Suzanne Collins Trilogy Gendering Science Fiction Films offers many insights into the formative period of a genre that today is technological culture's most important forum, while reminding us of the varied voices that always speak through our films. Using science fiction 'invasion' films of the 1950s as a lens, George's book reveals the subtle ways in which alternative attitudes and values have frequently been articulated and, in the process, joins with the films it describes in doing important cultural work - J. P. Telotte, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA


Gendering Science Fiction Films reminds us that marginalized films, such as science fiction invasion films, are a rich site for cultural conversations about weighty social issues. Taking for granted that depictions of women are central to the genre, George's cogent analysis helps us see how in the 1950s these films often used genre conventions against themselves in order to address and challenge conflicting gendered concepts such as momism, female desire, and a bread-winner masculinity. - Sarah Projansky, Associate Dean and Professor of Film and Media Arts and Gender Studies, University of Utah, USA Susan A. George is exceptionally knowledgeable and remarkably perceptive about films that almost everyone interested in movies has seen, but that few have recognized as culturally significant. By detailing both the SF silver screen's adherence to and resistance toward the dominant American ideologies of the Cold War era, George has created a thought-provoking, well researched work that is a must-have for college libraries, cinema scholars, and science fiction fans alike! - Mary F. Pharr, Professor Emeritus, English, Florida Southern College, USA, and co-editor of Of Bread, Blood and The Hunger Games: Critical Essays on the Suzanne Collins Trilogy Gendering Science Fiction Films offers many insights into the formative period of a genre that today is technological culture's most important forum, while reminding us of the varied voices that always speak through our films. Using science fiction 'invasion' films of the 1950s as a lens, George's book reveals the subtle ways in which alternative attitudes and values have frequently been articulated and, in the process, joins with the films it describes in doing important cultural work - J. P. Telotte, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA


Author Information

Susan A. George is Lecturer in the Karen Merritt Writing Program at the University of California, Merced, USA.

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