This is the first comparative consideration of the musical's role within national cinema traditions. While the musical is one cinema's few genuinely international genres, it has often functioned as an explicitly local or national form, drawing upon distinct traditions understood as 'native' rather than 'international'. Simultaneously, musicals from around the world have often imitated Hollywood models, resulting in their easy dismissal as culturally 'impure' and demonstrating the creative and ideological tension between promoting and abandoning traditional cultural forms and styles. This productive tension between local and global elements lies at the heart of international film musicals, which typically acknowledge the dominant Hollywood model while claiming their own cultural specificity. Key Features* Individual chapters provide succinct historical and critical discussions of musicals from sixteen major national film traditions, along with the transnational musical.* A coda by Rick Altman, one of the genre's most prominent scholars.* Lists of key resources offer teachers as well as students additional information.
Author: Corey K. Creekmur Publisher: Edinburgh University Press Published: 01/11/2013 Pages: 288 Binding Type: Paperback Weight: 1.10lbs Size: 9.20h x 6.00w x 0.90d ISBN: 9780748634774
Review Citation(s): Choice 10/01/2013
About the Author
Corey K. Creekmur is Associate Professor in the Departments of English and Cinema & Comparative Literature at the University of Iowa, where he also directs the Institute for Cinema and Culture. He is the author of Cattle Queens and Lonesome Cowboys: Gender and Sexuality in the Western (Duke UP, forthcoming) and the author of numerous essays on film music and popular Hindi cinema.
Linda Y. Mokdad is Visiting Assistant Professor at Michigan State University. She works on Hollywood and Arab cinemas, and has most recently completed an essay on the films of Palestinian filmmaker Elia Suleiman (Wallflower Press, forthcoming).