Login

Cashmore, Ellis

Martin Scorsese's America

Cashmore, Ellis - Martin Scorsese's America, ebook

21,10€

Ebook, ePUB with Adobe DRM
ISBN: 9780745658971
DRM Restrictions

Printing94 pages with an additional page accrued every 8 hours, capped at 94 pages
Copy to clipboard5 excerpts

For over four decades, Martin Scorsese has been the chronicler of an obsessive society, where material possessions and physical comfort are valued, where the pursuit of individual improvement is rewarded and where male prerogative is respected and preserved.

Scorsese has often described his films as sociology and he has a point: his storytelling condenses complex information into comprehensible narratives about society. In this sense, he has been a guide through a dark world of nineteenth century crypto-fascism to a fetishistic twentieth century in which goods, fame, money and power are held to have magical power.

Author of Tyson: Nurture of the Beast and Beckham, Ellis Cashmore turns his attention to arguably the most influential living film- maker to explore how Scorsese envisions America. Greed, manhood, the city and romantic love feature on Scorsese's landscape of secular materialism. They are among the themes Cashmore argues have driven and inform Scorsese's work. This is America, as seen through the eyes of Martin Scorsese and it is a deeply unpleasant place.

Cashmore's book discloses how, collectively, Scorsese's films present an image of America. It's an image assembled from the perspectives of obsessive people, whether burned-out paramedics, compulsive entrepreneurs, tortured lovers, or celebrity-fixated comedians. It's collected from pool halls, taxicabs, boxing rings and jazz clubs. It's an image that's specific, yet ubiquitous. It is Martin Scorsese's America.

Keywords: Film Studies

Author(s)
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
Publication year
2009
Language
en
Edition
2
Series
PALS-Polity America Through the Lens series
Page amount
312 pages
Category
Art, Art History
Format
Ebook
eISBN (ePUB)
9780745658971
Printed ISBN
9780745645230

Similar titles