Academic Films for the Classroom: A History

Front Cover
McFarland, Jan 10, 2014 - Performing Arts - 244 pages

Exploring a realm of film often dismissed as campy or contrived, this book traces the history of classroom educational films from the silent era through the 1980s, when film finally began to lose ground to video-based and digital media. It profiles 35 individual academic filmmakers who played a role in bringing these roughly 100,000 16mm films to classrooms across North America, paying particular attention to auteur John Barnes and his largely neglected body of work. Other topics include the production companies contributing to the growth and development of the academic film genre; the complex history of post-Sputnik, federally-funded educational initiatives which influenced the growth of the academic film genre; and the denouement of the genre in classrooms and its resurgence on the Internet.

 

Contents

2 A Cold War Funds a Hot Medium
38
3 Writing a New Cookbook
47
4 The Companies That Made the Films and the People Behind Them
62
5 Immortal Longings
139
6 Profiles of 34 Significant Academic Filmmakers
157
7 Final Takes
194
Appendix A
201
Appendix B
204
Appendix C
206
Chapter Notes
209
Bibliography
219
Index
223
Copyright

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About the author (2014)

Geoff Alexander has authored two books on cinema and has written on musical subjects ranging from jazz history to flamenco. He is the founder and director of the Academic Film Archive of North America, in San Jose, California, the first archive solely dedicated to the history, preservation, and scholarship of the classroom educational film.

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