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Hi Scott,
There's Luigi Pirandello's novel 'Shoot!' written I think in about 1916.
It's posited as 'the diary of a cameraman' and is all about cinema,
mechanisation and modernity. Walter Benjamin mentions it in his 'Work of
Art' essay.
Cheers
Lisa
On 5/26/07, SCREEN-L automatic digest system <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> There is 1 message totalling 25 lines in this issue.
>
> Topics of the day:
>
> 1. novels about early cinema
>
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> Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the
> University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu
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> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Date: Thu, 24 May 2007 15:17:10 -0400
> From: Scott Hutchins <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: novels about early cinema
>
> I was wondering if anyone knows of any novels about early cinema that are
> from the period when such films were new. I recently read L. Frank Baum's
> _Aunt Jane's Nieces Out West_, which is partly a fictional account of the
> film scene in 1914, but mainly about a man falsely accused of being a jewel
> thief. By the end I felt I'd learned more about pearls than an early
> response to the film scene by someone who was both an insider and an
> outsider at the very time he wrote the book. Can anyone think of other
> examples of this sort of fiction?
>
>
>
>
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> End of SCREEN-L Digest - 24 May 2007 to 25 May 2007 (#2007-77)
> **************************************************************
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