Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression

After becoming a major star thanks to his performances in Fury (1936) and San Francisco (1936), Spencer Tracy consolidated his popularity in the US by starring in critical and commercial successes such as Captain Courageous (1937), Test Pilot (1938), Boys Town (1938) or Boom Town (1940). The polls m...

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Main Author: Jules Sandeau
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pléiade (EA 7338) 2019-11-01
Series:Itinéraires
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/6812
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author Jules Sandeau
author_facet Jules Sandeau
author_sort Jules Sandeau
collection DOAJ
description After becoming a major star thanks to his performances in Fury (1936) and San Francisco (1936), Spencer Tracy consolidated his popularity in the US by starring in critical and commercial successes such as Captain Courageous (1937), Test Pilot (1938), Boys Town (1938) or Boom Town (1940). The polls made by Gallup in 1940 confirmed that he was at the time the most loved Hollywood star in the US, far ahead of Mickey Rooney, Clark Gable and Bette Davis, the three most popular stars after him. This article attempts to understand the reasons for this exceptional success, by shedding light on Tracy’s image in the US ideological context of the second half of the 1930s. Analyzing the actor’s films and magazine articles about him, I highlight the complexity of his persona, particularly it’s national and gendered facets. I aim to show that Tracy’s image thus articulates two conceptions of American masculinity, usually distinguished in english by the terms “manhood” and “masculinity,” and thereby resolves an ideological contradiction exacerbated by the process of national reconstruction that followed the years of the Great Depression.
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spelling doaj.art-ffe00c474b3640e597b4de296f8ede832022-12-21T23:00:43ZfraPléiade (EA 7338)Itinéraires2427-920X2019-11-01201910.4000/itineraires.6812Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande DépressionJules SandeauAfter becoming a major star thanks to his performances in Fury (1936) and San Francisco (1936), Spencer Tracy consolidated his popularity in the US by starring in critical and commercial successes such as Captain Courageous (1937), Test Pilot (1938), Boys Town (1938) or Boom Town (1940). The polls made by Gallup in 1940 confirmed that he was at the time the most loved Hollywood star in the US, far ahead of Mickey Rooney, Clark Gable and Bette Davis, the three most popular stars after him. This article attempts to understand the reasons for this exceptional success, by shedding light on Tracy’s image in the US ideological context of the second half of the 1930s. Analyzing the actor’s films and magazine articles about him, I highlight the complexity of his persona, particularly it’s national and gendered facets. I aim to show that Tracy’s image thus articulates two conceptions of American masculinity, usually distinguished in english by the terms “manhood” and “masculinity,” and thereby resolves an ideological contradiction exacerbated by the process of national reconstruction that followed the years of the Great Depression.http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/6812masculinitystar studiespersonaUnited StatesGreat Depressioncinema
spellingShingle Jules Sandeau
Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
Itinéraires
masculinity
star studies
persona
United States
Great Depression
cinema
title Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
title_full Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
title_fullStr Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
title_full_unstemmed Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
title_short Spencer Tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinité hégémonique américaine après la Grande Dépression
title_sort spencer tracy et la reconfiguration de la masculinite hegemonique americaine apres la grande depression
topic masculinity
star studies
persona
United States
Great Depression
cinema
url http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/6812
work_keys_str_mv AT julessandeau spencertracyetlareconfigurationdelamasculinitehegemoniqueamericaineapreslagrandedepression