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[Apologies for cross-posting--]
Hello all,
The latest issue of Film History (vol. 26, no. 1) is now available, featuring a variety of new articles that may be of interest to readers, including:
* Film, Cultural Policy, and World War I Training Camps: Send Your Soldier to the Show with Smileage (Sue Collins)
* The Myth of Evangeline and the Origin of Canadian National Cinema (Zoë Constantinides)
* Marketing Rebellion: The Chinese Revolution Reconsidered (Kim Fahlstedt)
* Millhouse: The Problems and Opportunities of Political Cinema (Mark Minett)
* Splitsville: Independent Exhibitors Court Federal Intervention in the American Film Industry, 1975-1988 (Deron Overpeck)
This issue also contains the inaugural installment of a new recurring feature called "Re-Readings," featuring historiographic reevaluation of important pre-1960 works of film history:
* "What Movie Tonight?": Margaret Thorp between the Aesthetics and the Sociology of American Cinema (Dana Polan)
We hope you will enjoy reading this issue, which can be accessed on JSTOR or Project MUSE:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/filmhistory.26.issue-1
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/film_history/toc/fih.26.1.html
All the best,
David Church, Managing Editor
Film History
[log in to unmask]
Department of Communication and Culture
800 E. Third Street
Indiana University
Bloomington IN 47405
----
Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the
University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu
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