Women & Film History International Universal Women: Filmmaking and Institutional Change in Early Hollywood (Women’s Media History Now!)

Type
Book
ISBN 10
0252077008 
ISBN 13
9780252077005 
Category
Hollywood History  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2010 
Pages
264 
Subject
Women motion picture producers and directors- United States; Universal Pictures; Hollywood 
Abstract
Between 1912 and 1919, the Universal Film Manufacturing Company first systematically supported and promoted women directors--crediting eleven women with directing at least 170 films--and then abruptly reversed that policy. In this trailblazing study, Mark Garrett Cooper approaches the phenomenon as a case study in how corporate movie studios interpret and act on institutional culture. In focusing on issues of institutional change, Cooper challenges interpretations that explain women's exile from the film industry as the inevitable result of a transhistorical sexism or as an effect of a broadly cultural revision of gendered work roles. Drawing on a range of historical and sociological approaches to studying corporate institutions, Cooper examines the relationship between institutional organization and aesthetic conventions during the formative years when women filmmakers such as Ruth Ann Baldwin, Cleo Madison, Ruth Stonehouse, Elise Jane Wilson, and Ida May Park directed films for Universal. 
Description
Contents:
Preface : a puzzle, some premises, and a hypothesis
Possibility. Universal's names
Universal's organization
Universal City
Impossibility. Genre : a category of institutional analysis
Serials : the foreclosure of collaboration
Gender and the dramatic feature
Postscript : Eleanor's catch 
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