The Community of Cinema: How Cinema and Spectacle Transformed the American Downtown
By (Author) James Forsher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.43
Hardback
168
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
397g
The movie theater has in many ways served as a barometer of the evolution of urban America over the past century. The Community of Cinema explores how the growth and decline of the inner city has been intertwined with the history of the movie theater, how the cinema helped redefine the use of downtowns to include entertainment and socialization, a sense of social place in our society, and the use of spectacle as a part of our daily experience in shopping, eating, and business. This is the first book to examine directly the importance of the movie theater in the creation and growth of the modern American downtown, and its fostering of its own sense of place and community. The Community of Cinema also attempts to bridge the various fields included in the subject of cinema's impact on culture and form, among them film studies, architecture, urban planning, and sociology. In so doing, author James M. Forsher explores in each chapter the ways in which the community of cinema came about, the changes it sparked in the downtown and neighborhood shopping districts, and the sense of community it added to our society as a whole.
Lower-division undergraduates and general readers.-Choice
"Lower-division undergraduates and general readers."-Choice
JAMES FORSHER is the Director of the Media Production Program at California State University, Hayward.