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The cultural politics of contemporary Hollywood film
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21 January 2019

PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Films, cinema, PHILOSOPHY / Political, Sex and sexuality, social aspects, Film history, theory or criticism, Social and political philosophy
‘This is an important book which helps us better understand a key political and cultural phenomena – Hollywood films. The book is engaging, packed with insights, and helps us understand film as ‘political objects’. The authors remind us that we have to critically think about films as diverse as Avatar, Mama Mia! and Bride Wars, and see them not just as cultural artefacts; but as a wider part of reinforcing and sustaining wider power relations. This is a book that finely judges the balance between levity and gravity – it’s a book with a serious project at this core, but never loses sight of the passion and excitement of cinema-going.’
Rob Manwaring, Flinders University
Chris Beasley is Professor of Politics at the University of Adelaide
Heather Brook is Senior Lecturer in Women’s Studies at Flinders University
Foreword by Douglas Kellner
1 Introduction: the cultural politics of popular film
2 Frames
Part I: Security
3 Security: order and disorder
4 War and order
5 Disorder and fear
6 Fearsome monsters
Part II: Relationalities
7 Gender and intimate relationships
8 Romance
9 Bromance
Part III: Social critique
10 Against the grain? Socially critical movies
11 Questioning the critical
Part IV: Global agendas
12 The big picture: the ‘metropole’ and peripheral ‘others’
13 Responses from ‘the margins’
Index