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[Commlist] QRFV Special Issue: Hollywood Film Style and the Production Code
Mon Jan 06 17:05:37 GMT 2025
Tom Brown is announcing the publication of a special journal issue
entitled “Hollywood Film Style and the Production Code: Criticism and
History”.
In the /Quarterly Review of Film and Video
<https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/gqrf20/current>, 11 brand new articles
by a range of international scholars discuss the stylistic impact or
traces of the self-regulatory regime that governed much of Classical
Hollywood production – the regulations administered by the PCA
(Production Code Administration) sometimes known as the “Hays Code” or
simply “the Code”. /
Check out the list of articles in the link above. Some will be open
access on a permanent basis but all articles will be open access at some
point this year on a rolling basis. Currently, amongst others, you can
view the broad-ranging critical introduction
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10509208.2024.2427536> to
the special issue, which includes summaries of all the essays as well as
a version of “the Code” itself. And, this month, Martha Shearer’s “Some
Warners Musicals and the Spirit of the Production Code
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10509208.2024.2410519>” is
available open access. Here is Martha’s abstract:
“Warners backstage musicals of 1933 appear regularly in accounts of
‘pre-Code Hollywood’ that highlight their apparent violations of the
Production Code. Those films are often contrasted with the RKO Fred
Astaire-Ginger Rogers romantic dance musicals, largely produced after
the Code's supposed ‘enforcement’ from 1934. This article argues,
however, that the apparently dramatic contrast between the decade's two
major cycles and their relationship to the Code is better understood as
a process that Richard Maltby argues was characteristic of early 1930s
Hollywood: ‘the more gradual, more complex and less melodramatic
evolution of systems of convention in representation.’ Placing the
aesthetics of Warners musicals in dialogue with Production Code files
and internal studio documents, this article contends that the musical's
shift towards a romantic model was a pragmatic response to the Code, one
that was already in progress before July 1934. Genre—if understood as an
historical process rather than one essential definition or a set of
monolithic subgenres—can make such aesthetic shifts and institutional
renegotiations visible.”
I am especially delighted that the collection, which, as well as being
an intervention in debates on the Code seeks to reconsider the place of
“close textual analysis” within contemporary Film History, found a home
in the /Quarterly Review of Film and Video /exactly 30 years after the
journal published a groundbreaking special issue on the Code that was
edited by Lea Jacobs and Richard Maltby. To mark this anniversary, the
journal has kindly agreed to make the 1995 special issue open access
<https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/gqrf20/15/4> throughout most of 2025.
For those based in South East England, please look out for details of a
BFI Southbank library talk about the special issue that will take place
on Monday 3^rd February.
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