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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mike WaynePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.356kg ISBN: 9781138677876ISBN 10: 1138677876 Pages: 218 Publication Date: 13 December 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print 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 ContentsChapter 1: Marxism Chapter 2: History Chapter 3: Methodologies Chapter 4: Production Chapter 5: Form Chapter 6: Ideology Chapter 7: Realism Chapter 8: CultureReviews'Marxism Goes to the Movies serves as an invaluable resource that persuasively argues how film studies must substantively engage with areas of political economy and cultural studies in order to remain politically relevant. Mike Wayne reveals how the politics of form emerge from wider cultural practices and distinct historical moments. Especially valuable, the book uses specific films and concrete examples related to filmmaking and various media industries to translate Marxist concepts to film and media studies students of all levels. Due to its wide-ranging focus on film production, distribution, exhibition, and reception, Marxism Goes to the Movies will serve as a core text in many film history and theory courses that want to relate the central ways in which film structures our relationship to the world and serves as a primary terrain where social change happens.' Chris Robe, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Florida Atlantic University 'Very simply, the best single volume introduction to Marxism and film. Undogmatic, critical and nuanced, it leads the reader through the evolving ideas and practices necessary to make sense of the films that surround us, the industry that produces and sells them, and the audiences that enjoy or endure them.' Mark Bould, University of the West of England 'Mike Wayne's book is a masterful synthesis not only of film theory over the century and a quarter of its existence but of aesthetic theory, as well as being acutely aware of the overlap between the two and political economy. The thesis of Marxism Goes to the Movies, which he argues forcefully, is that the precepts of Marx and the Marxist tradition is the explanatory vehicle that best allows us to understand and grasp the formal and social contradictions that undergird the cinema. The book's breadth of individual films and film movements is wide, encompassing British realism, Latin American anti-imperialist films and Marvel's Captain America. In this time of raging inequality, of zero-interest rates and climate devastation and plunder, Wayne's call to materialist analysis and action could not be more relevant.' Dennis Broe, Birth of the Binge: Serial TV and The End of Leisure 'Marxism Goes to the Movies serves as an invaluable resource that persuasively argues how film studies must substantively engage with areas of political economy and cultural studies in order to remain politically relevant. Mike Wayne reveals how the politics of form emerge from wider cultural practices and distinct historical moments. Especially valuable, the book uses specific films and concrete examples related to filmmaking and various media industries to translate Marxist concepts to film and media studies students of all levels. Due to its wide-ranging focus on film production, distribution, exhibition, and reception, Marxism Goes to the Movies will serve as a core text in many film history and theory courses that want to relate the central ways in which film structures our relationship to the world and serves as a primary terrain where social change happens.' Chris Robe, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Florida Atlantic University 'Very simply, the best single volume introduction to Marxism and film. Undogmatic, critical and nuanced, it leads the reader through the evolving ideas and practices necessary to make sense of the films that surround us, the industry that produces and sells them, and the audiences that enjoy or endure them.' Mark Bould, University of the West of England 'Marxism Goes to the Movies serves as an invaluable resource that persuasively argues how film studies must substantively engage with areas of political economy and cultural studies in order to remain politically relevant. Mike Wayne reveals how the politics of form emerge from wider cultural practices and distinct historical moments. Especially valuable, the book uses specific films and concrete examples related to filmmaking and various media industries to translate Marxist concepts to film and media studies students of all levels. Due to its wide-ranging focus on film production, distribution, exhibition, and reception, Marxism Goes to the Movies will serve as a core text in many film history and theory courses that want to relate the central ways in which film structures our relationship to the world and serves as a primary terrain where social change happens.' Chris Robe, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Florida Atlantic University 'Very simply, the best single volume introduction to Marxism and film. Undogmatic, critical and nuanced, it leads the reader through the evolving ideas and practices necessary to make sense of the films that surround us, the industry that produces and sells them, and the audiences that enjoy or endure them.' Mark Bould, University of the West of England 'Mike Wayne's book is a masterful synthesis not only of film theory over the century and a quarter of its existence but of aesthetic theory, as well as being acutely aware of the overlap between the two and political economy. The thesis of Marxism Goes to the Movies, which he argues forcefully, is that the precepts of Marx and the Marxist tradition is the explanatory vehicle that best allows us to understand and grasp the formal and social contradictions that undergird the cinema. The book's breadth of individual films and film movements is wide, encompassing British realism, Latin American anti-imperialist films and Marvel's Captain America. In this time of raging inequality, of zero-interest rates and climate devastation and plunder, Wayne's call to materialist analysis and action could not be more relevant.' Dennis Broe, Birth of the Binge: Serial TV and The End of Leisure 'In his relatively short book Mike Wayne manages to cover the many different facets of the relationship between Marxism and film, including film production, distribution, aesthetic form and questions of realism, drawing on and adding to the work of a number of historical figures, such as Raymond Williams and Gramsci. Marxism Goes to the Movies is an indispensable source for anybody who is not only interested in Marxism and film, but also in the way ideology affects and is conveyed by film.' Ewa Mazierska, Professor of Film Studies, University of Central Lancashire Marxism Goes to the Movies serves as an invaluable resource that persuasively argues how film studies must substantively engage with areas of political economy and cultural studies in order to remain politically relevant. Mike Wayne reveals how the politics of form emerge from wider cultural practices and distinct historical moments. Especially valuable, the book uses specific films and concrete examples related to filmmaking and various media industries to translate Marxist concepts to film and media studies students of all levels. Due to its wide-ranging focus on film production, distribution, exhibition, and reception, Marxism Goes to the Movies will serve as a core text in many film history and theory courses that want to relate the central ways in which film structures our relationship to the world and serves as a primary terrain where social change happens. Chris Robe, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Florida Atlantic University 'Marxism Goes to the Movies serves as an invaluable resource that persuasively argues how film studies must substantively engage with areas of political economy and cultural studies in order to remain politically relevant. Mike Wayne reveals how the politics of form emerge from wider cultural practices and distinct historical moments. Especially valuable, the book uses specific films and concrete examples related to filmmaking and various media industries to translate Marxist concepts to film and media studies students of all levels. Due to its wide-ranging focus on film production, distribution, exhibition, and reception, Marxism Goes to the Movies will serve as a core text in many film history and theory courses that want to relate the central ways in which film structures our relationship to the world and serves as a primary terrain where social change happens.' Chris Robe, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Florida Atlantic University Author InformationMike Wayne is Professor of Screen Media at Brunel University, London. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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