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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Erin HillPublisher: Rutgers University Press Imprint: Rutgers University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.513kg ISBN: 9780813574868ISBN 10: 0813574862 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 05 October 2016 Recommended Age: From 16 to 99 years Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly 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 ContentsContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1 Paper Trail: Efficiency, Clerical Labor, and Women in the Early Film Industry 2 Studio Tours: Feminized Labor in the Studio System 3 The Girl Friday and How She Grew: Female Clerical Workers and/as the System 4 “His Acolyte on the Altar of Cinema”: The Studio Secretary’s Creative Service 5 Studio Girls: Women’s Professions in Media Production Epilogue: The Legacy of “Women’s Work” in Contemporary Hollywood Appendix: Work Roles Divided By Gender as Represented in Studio Tours Films NotesBibliographyIndexReviewsHill offers a unique and exciting analysis of the largely unacknowledged work done by women in the film industry, providing a new history that shifts our understanding of old ones. Never Done will make a significant impact in the field. --Mary Desjardins author of Recycled Stars: Female Film Stardom in the Age of Television and Video """[A] ground‐breaking contribution to women's media history.""-- ""Gender and History"" ""At a time in which revelations about industry sexism and brutal power games emerge on a seemingly daily basis, Hill's book stands as a valuable chronicle of not just the struggles but also the successes of studio-era Hollywood women. Enhancing our understanding of the past while helping to place present-day crises in their historical context, Hill demonstrates that a woman's work in Hollywood is, indeed, never done.""-- ""Media Industries"" ""Hill's project is also a necessary addition to any course on production studies, or media industry studies because it demonstrates a viable historical research method on media labor to students. It does so in a way that calls for further research on undervalued media laborers. And in conclusion, at a moment when many academic programs and departments are establishing archives of their own institutional histories, Never Done reminds us of the need for inclusive approaches to historicizing labor in our own communities.""-- ""Cinema Journal"" ""Hill's project is...a necessary addition to any course on production studies, or media industry studies because it demonstrates a viable historical research method on media labor to students. It does so in a way that calls for further research on undervalued media laborers. And in conclusion, at a moment when many academic programs and departments are establishing archives of their own institutional histories, Never Done reminds us of the need for inclusive approaches to historicizing labor in our own communities.""-- ""Journal for Cinema and Media Studies"" ""Hill's well-researched book...excels in exposing readers to female actors previously ignored by historians.""-- ""H-Net"" ""Erin Hill's book is an eye opening look at 'women's work' in the entertainment industry. If you are asking why there aren't more women in the executive suite or the director's chair, the answer is here.""--Diane English ""writer, producer, director"" ""Exactly the history we need! Erin Hill provides a fascinating account of the work women have always done at all levels of the movie industry.""--Shelley Stamp ""author of Lois Weber in Early Hollywood"" ""[A] highly engaging read and inspir[es] models of historical scholarship that add volumes to our understanding of the roles that women played or were blocked from playing in the Hollywood studio system and the first decade of network television....Never Done draws from untapped sources to uncover history that few at the time thought was worth preserving in any systematic way.""-- ""Signs"" ""An absolutely essential work. Erin Hill's Never Done is elegantly researched and analyzed and profoundly moving, taking us through all the roles women created in early motion picture history. Exhilarating!""--Allison Anders ""film and TV director and screenwriter"" ""Hill offers a unique and exciting analysis of the largely unacknowledged work done by women in the film industry, providing a new history that shifts our understanding of old ones. Never Done will make a significant impact in the field.""--Mary Desjardins ""author of Recycled Stars: Female Film Stardom in the Age of Television and Video"" ""In addition to its commendable social agenda, Never Done's meticulous research, direct, elegant prose, and novel approach to an under-researched topic secure its status as an essential contribution to film history.""-- ""Film Quarterly""" [A] ground-breaking contribution to women's media history. --Mary Desjardins Gender and History At a time in which revelations about industry sexism and brutal power games emerge on a seemingly daily basis, Hill's book stands as a valuable chronicle of not just the struggles but also the successes of studio-era Hollywood women. Enhancing our understanding of the past while helping to place present-day crises in their historical context, Hill demonstrates that a woman's work in Hollywood is, indeed, never done. --Mary Desjardins Media Industries Erin Hill's book is an eye opening look at 'women's work' in the entertainment industry. If you are asking why there aren't more women in the executive suite or the director's chair, the answer is here. --Diane English writer, producer, director Exactly the history we need! Erin Hill provides a fascinating account of the work women have always done at all levels of the movie industry. --Shelley Stamp author of Lois Weber in Early Hollywood Hill's project is also a necessary addition to any course on production studies, or media industry studies because it demonstrates a viable historical research method on media labor to students. It does so in a way that calls for further research on undervalued media laborers. And in conclusion, at a moment when many academic programs and departments are establishing archives of their own institutional histories, Never Done reminds us of the need for inclusive approaches to historicizing labor in our own communities. --Mary Desjardins Cinema Journal Hill's project is...a necessary addition to any course on production studies, or media industry studies because it demonstrates a viable historical research method on media labor to students. It does so in a way that calls for further research on undervalued media laborers. And in conclusion, at a moment when many academic programs and departments are establishing archives of their own institutional histories, Never Done reminds us of the need for inclusive approaches to historicizing labor in our own communities. --Mary Desjardins Journal for Cinema and Media Studies Hill's well-researched book...excels in exposing readers to female actors previously ignored by historians. --Mary Desjardins H-Net In addition to its commendable social agenda, Never Done's meticulous research, direct, elegant prose, and novel approach to an under-researched topic secure its status as an essential contribution to film history. -- Film Quarterly Hill offers a unique and exciting analysis of the largely unacknowledged work done by women in the film industry, providing a new history that shifts our understanding of old ones. Never Done will make a significant impact in the field. --Mary Desjardins author of Recycled Stars: Female Film Stardom in the Age of Television and Video An absolutely essential work. Erin Hill's Never Done is elegantly researched and analyzed and profoundly moving, taking us through all the roles women created in early motion picture history. Exhilarating! --Allison Anders film and TV director and screenwriter Author InformationERIN HILL worked in film development before returning to academia to study the media industry. She is currently a visiting professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, and Dartmouth College’s Foreign Study Program in Los Angeles. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |