Pleasing Everyone: Mass Entertainment in Renaissance London and Golden-Age Hollywood

Author:   Jeffrey Knapp (University of California Berkeley)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:  

9780190634094


Publication Date:   20 January 2017
Format:   Undefined
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Pleasing Everyone: Mass Entertainment in Renaissance London and Golden-Age Hollywood


Overview

Shakespeare's plays were immensely popular in their own day -- so why do we refuse to think of them as mass entertainment? In Pleasing Everyone, author Jeffrey Knapp opens our eyes to the uncanny resemblance between Renaissance drama and the incontrovertibly mass medium of Golden-Age Hollywood cinema. Through fascinating explorations of such famous plays as Hamlet, The Roaring Girl, and The Alchemist, and such celebrated films as Citizen Kane, The Jazz Singer, and City Lights, Knapp challenges some of our most basic assumptions about the relationship between art and mass audiences. Above all, Knapp encourages us to resist the prejudice that mass entertainment necessarily simplifies and cheapens whatever it touches. As Knapp shows, it was instead the ceaseless pressure to please everyone that helped generate the astonishing richness and complexity of Renaissance drama as well as of Hollywood film.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jeffrey Knapp (University of California Berkeley)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press, USA
Imprint:   Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:  

9780190634094


ISBN 10:   019063409
Publication Date:   20 January 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Undefined
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

"""Knapp has written one of the most interesting books about Shakespeare and film precisely because it isn't a study of Shakespeare on film, thereby revealing some highly original insights about both forms."" --Henry Turner, SEL ""An important and eminently readable book whose central hypothesis needs to be taken seriously by anyone who entertains an interest in Renaissance drama or popular entertainment of whatever guise"" --Bulletin of the Comediantes ""In taking on the theater/film dyad, Knapp strikes at the heart of many of the theoretical foundations of the entire field of cinema studies itself, patiently eroding the apparent self-evidence of terms such as 'mass, ' 'entertainment, ' 'art, ' 'modernity, ' and 'technology, ' by giving them a different history and by showing, through a series of tour-de-force close readings, how that history has been shaped and reflected upon by plays and films themselves. Pleasing Everyone is a game-changer, bringing to cinema and media studies a salutary shift in frame of reference that will be the source of much study and debate.""- James Schamus, James Schamus, director (Indignation), producer (Brokeback Mountain), screenwriter (The Ice Storm), Columbia University ""With its original critical and historiographical strategies and meticulous scholarship, Pleasing Everyone is a remarkable achievement. Knapp's acute comparative analyses of the performance cultures of Shakespeare's London and Hollywood's 'Golden Age' and sophisticated, lively readings of films and plays make this an outstandingly engaging and stimulating read.""- Russell Jackson, author of Shakespeare and the English-Speaking Cinema, University of Birmingham ""What happens when, putting our high-toned Renaissance drama next to our lowdown Hollywood cinema, we think them together? In Jeffrey Knapp's strongly argued new study, the outcome is an original-and highly usable-conception of 'mass entertainment' in which art and junk, individual and mass, author and collaboration are always inseparable in their dialectical play. For all its immortal verses, the drama proves as fully invested in the business of popular entertainment as anything that came after it; and despite its programmatic accessibility, the cinema acquires an artistic credibility that makes talk of 'authors' and 'self-reflection' necessary categories of analysis. The intricate readings that carry this argument forward are so fresh that even practiced critical hands may feel they are discovering The Winter's Tale or Citizen Kane for the first time.""- D.A Miller, author of The Novel and the Police and Hidden Hitchcock, University of California, Berkeley ""In his ingeniously designed chapters on work and play, Knapp puts the Puritanism of early modern antitheatrical discourses, which argued that the commercial theater disguised play as work, into productive tension with the elitism of Adorno and Horkheimer, who argued that commercial cinema threatened to disguise work as play. Because the book, like its objets, balances tension with openness, even readers resisting Knapp's arguments or maintaining the assumptions he critiques, as this reader did throughout, might nevertheless be pleased--even enriched--by his virtuosic readings of these complex entertainments.""--Renaissance Quarterly"


""Knapp has written one of the most interesting books about Shakespeare and film precisely because it isn't a study of Shakespeare on film, thereby revealing some highly original insights about both forms."" --Henry Turner, SEL ""An important and eminently readable book whose central hypothesis needs to be taken seriously by anyone who entertains an interest in Renaissance drama or popular entertainment of whatever guise"" --Bulletin of the Comediantes ""In taking on the theater/film dyad, Knapp strikes at the heart of many of the theoretical foundations of the entire field of cinema studies itself, patiently eroding the apparent self-evidence of terms such as 'mass, ' 'entertainment, ' 'art, ' 'modernity, ' and 'technology, ' by giving them a different history and by showing, through a series of tour-de-force close readings, how that history has been shaped and reflected upon by plays and films themselves. Pleasing Everyone is a game-changer, bringing to cinema and media studies a salutary shift in frame of reference that will be the source of much study and debate.""- James Schamus, James Schamus, director (Indignation), producer (Brokeback Mountain), screenwriter (The Ice Storm), Columbia University ""With its original critical and historiographical strategies and meticulous scholarship, Pleasing Everyone is a remarkable achievement. Knapp's acute comparative analyses of the performance cultures of Shakespeare's London and Hollywood's 'Golden Age' and sophisticated, lively readings of films and plays make this an outstandingly engaging and stimulating read.""- Russell Jackson, author of Shakespeare and the English-Speaking Cinema, University of Birmingham ""What happens when, putting our high-toned Renaissance drama next to our lowdown Hollywood cinema, we think them together? In Jeffrey Knapp's strongly argued new study, the outcome is an original-and highly usable-conception of 'mass entertainment' in which art and junk, individual and mass, author and collaboration are always inseparable in their dialectical play. For all its immortal verses, the drama proves as fully invested in the business of popular entertainment as anything that came after it; and despite its programmatic accessibility, the cinema acquires an artistic credibility that makes talk of 'authors' and 'self-reflection' necessary categories of analysis. The intricate readings that carry this argument forward are so fresh that even practiced critical hands may feel they are discovering The Winter's Tale or Citizen Kane for the first time.""- D.A Miller, author of The Novel and the Police and Hidden Hitchcock, University of California, Berkeley ""In his ingeniously designed chapters on work and play, Knapp puts the Puritanism of early modern antitheatrical discourses, which argued that the commercial theater disguised play as work, into productive tension with the elitism of Adorno and Horkheimer, who argued that commercial cinema threatened to disguise work as play. Because the book, like its objets, balances tension with openness, even readers resisting Knapp's arguments or maintaining the assumptions he critiques, as this reader did throughout, might nevertheless be pleased--even enriched--by his virtuosic readings of these complex entertainments.""--Renaissance Quarterly


Author Information

Jeffrey Knapp is the Eggers Professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of several books, including An Empire Nowhere: England and America from Utopia to The Tempest (1992), Shakespeare's Tribe: Church, Nation, and Theater in Renaissance England (2002), and Shakespeare Only (2009).

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