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American Film and Society since 1945

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From Steven Spielberg's Lincoln to Clint Eastwood's American Sniper , this fifth edition of this classic film study text adds even more recent films and examines how these movies depict and represent the feelings and values of American society.

One of the few authoritative books about American film and society, Praeger's American Film and Society since 1945 combines accessible, fun-to-read text with a detailed, insightful, and scholarly political and social analysis that thoroughly explores the relationship of American film to society and provides essential historical context. The historical overview provides a "capsule analysis" of both American and Hollywood history for the most recent decade as well as past eras, in which topics like American realism; Vietnam, counterculture revolutions, and 1960s films; and Hollywood depictions of big business like Wall Street are covered.

Readers will better understand the explicit and hidden meanings of films and appreciate the effects of the passion and personal engagement that viewers experience with films. This new edition prominently features a new chapter on American and Hollywood history from 2010 to 2017, giving readers an expanded examination of a breadth of culturally and socially important modern films that serves student research or pleasure reading. The coauthors have also included additional analysis of classic films such as To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) and A Face in the Crowd (1957).

376 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1984

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
1 review
July 22, 2025
Although I never took a film course during my studies, I always had an interest in understanding the influence of US film/Hollywood on history and culture. I came across this book when I previously worked as a custodian in the English building at West Chester University; I imagine it was used in a course there at one point.

It's definitely a dry read, as it's pretty much just an academic textbook that never dives too deeply into any passing subject. The textbook is most engaging in the early section--discussion of American film in the 40s. There's a bit more interesting philosophizing going on here ("Does film influence culture? Or does culture influence film?") The writers portray how, over the following years after WWII, films started to mature and expand beyond happy-go-lucky war propaganda. There's continued interesting writing, delving into the HUAC time period of Hollywood censorship.

Unfortunately, after the 40s/50s decade coverage, it seems to have diminishing returns. From the 60s section onward, the pace of movie references rapidly increases with less and less depth provided to each film. I was expecting the most analysis to come in the section on the 60s (a time of dramatic social upheaval) but it fell flat for me. By the end of the book, finishing up in the 80s, it felt like the writing lost steam and focus. It just jumps from movie to movie too quickly.

Overall, as someone who didn't know much about film culture previously, I can definitely say I gleaned some knowledge from this book. I'd say it's strongest asset is simply as a reference for good movies, or rather impactful movies, that you can later watch on your own.
124 reviews
March 11, 2020
This book covers a lot - a lot of films, a lot of decades and a lot of genres. It is an easy to read book that provides historical background regarding the decades' main events at the beginning of each chapter and then analises several films from said decade in connection with the trends in society. However it ends up feeling like a lot.
The authors try to cover too many films and does not provide some kind of summarising paragraph per chapter that connects it all. It fails to show what the films for each decade where focused on, as one does not get a big picture of the decade - it is all too unconnected and at times seems random. Additionally, the authors have the need to, at times, mention how a film is not intellectual or does not explain the political background for a particular war - which feels unnecessary. Not all films have to be intellectual and it seems that the authors do not recognise the fact that some films are fictional and do not need to provide a historical lesson.
The book does have a lot of interesting information but it does feel like it lacks focus (some arguments should have been expained deeper) and one comes away from it not really knowing how the films from each decade represented American film and society.
1 review
July 16, 2020
While the book itself has great vast knowledge about films and how Hollywood has been altered by political issues going on in our great nation, the only downside is the fact that every single chapter has something negative to say about the Republican/ Conservative party. While writing this book, the authors should keep their own political opinions to themselves and just stick with the facts, instead of insulting a party every chance they get. Due to them being so immorally biased in their beliefs, they actually managed to get some facts wrong about every president that they talk about. Minor mistakes, but easily made when one is too stuck up their own agenda to listen to reason. I would only recommend this book if you are needing more information about some of the films mentioned for each decade, but other than that, this is not meant to be a history book about politics, but a book about films and the society who changed Hollywoods film direction.
Profile Image for Amy W.
598 reviews13 followers
dnf
June 27, 2019
DNF

I read the introduction, the '40s and got half way through the '50s, but going to quit here.

Despite what the introduction says, I didn't find this very accessible to someone with a more casual interest in the history of film. You really need to know your stuff to penetrate some of this (which kinda defeats the object of the book, if you already know it all...).

I'm interested in the goings on of old Hollywood, but haven't actually seen most of the films the book referenced which also hampered my enjoyment.
Profile Image for Paul Cornelius.
1,044 reviews41 followers
December 30, 2018
A workmanlike study of film and cultural history. It never gets too deep into either of its subjects, however, and ends up being especially superficial in the treatment of the films surveyed. Yes, it does give a basic run through of the films of the era and how they were received. So it's good for that. Perhaps someone coming into the subject matter cold, without any experience, will find it worthwhile.
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