The Politics of James Bond: From Fleming's Novels to the Big Screen
By (Author) Jeremy M. Black
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Films, cinema
Cultural studies
823.914
Hardback
256
The adventures and antics of James Bond have provided the world with many of the most gripping story lines of the late-20th century. Fleming's novels were best-sellers in their day, and the Bond films have been even more popular, becoming the most enduring and successful film franchise in history. By some estimates, half of the world's population - billions of people - have seen a James Bond movie, thus viewing an image of global struggle through Western eyes and obtaining a particular perception of Britain and the world. This accessible account of the global phenomenon uses the plots and characterizations in the novels and the blockbuster films to place Bond in an historical, cultural and political context. Black charts and explores how the settings and the dynamics of the Bond adventures have changed over time in response to shifts in the real-world environment in which the fictional Bond operates. Sex, race, class and violence are each important factors as .007 evolves from Cold Warrior to foe of SPECTRE and eventually to world defender pitted against megalomaniacal foes. The depiction of Bond, his leading ladies, and the major plots all shed light on world political attitudes and reflect elements of the real espionage history of the period. This look at Bond's world and his lasting legacy offers an intriguing glimpse into both cultural and popular entertainment.
"An insightful and thoroughly entertaining exploration of the political content and context of the Bond books and films. No fan of espionage thrillers will look at them in quite the same way again."-David R. Stone History Department Kansas State University
"Black wears his erudition lightly in demonstrating that the 007 saga is more than melodrama produced for profit. James Bond's durability and renewability as a pop-cultural icon owes much to the successful adaptation of his circumstances and his behavior to both the changing climate of international relations and the changing mores of Britain and the United States."-Dennis Showalter Professor of History Colorado College
Black's well-informed and well-argued analysis is an important addition to the growing corpus of serious works on the enduring and evolving appeal of James Bond-The London Times Higher Education Supplement
"Black's well-informed and well-argued analysis is an important addition to the growing corpus of serious works on the enduring and evolving appeal of James Bond"-The London Times Higher Education Supplement
JEREMY BLACK is Professor of History at the University of Exeter. He is a wide-ranging and prolific historian whose fields include military, British, international relations, European, and newspaper history. His 34 books include Maps and Politics, War for America, and War and the World, 1450-2000.