Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain

<p>This thesis explores the role of race, racism, and colonialism in British cinema culture of the 1920s and early 1930s. It argues firstly that silent film performance is received as a racialised element of film form in Britain; race is ‘read’ by British audiences into movements, gestures, an...

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Glavni avtor: Casey, J
Drugi avtorji: Das, S
Format: Thesis
Jezik:English
Izdano: 2023
Teme:
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author Casey, J
author2 Das, S
author_facet Das, S
Casey, J
author_sort Casey, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis explores the role of race, racism, and colonialism in British cinema culture of the 1920s and early 1930s. It argues firstly that silent film performance is received as a racialised element of film form in Britain; race is ‘read’ by British audiences into movements, gestures, and expressions. This is inflected by colonial constructions of racialised bodies and imperial geographies: the intimacies and distances between racialised groups that theorists argue underpin racial difference. Whereas many scholars have demonstrated that interwar British cinema entails performances of class, gender and national identities, this thesis foregrounds the performance of racial identity, often in ways which override or obscure these other social distinctions.</p> <p>Secondly, it posits that this performance of racial difference informs constructions of taste, decorum, and style in British cinema. Racialised performance determines perceptions of cinema’s effect on the body—of both performers and spectators—and the way it represents and disseminates British cultural and imperial heritage and history. Through performances of race, British filmmakers and critics construct cinema as entertainment, art form, historical record, and colonial educational tool. This thesis takes the reception and production in Britain of four case study genres, the ‘Eastern’, the Limehouse melodrama, the expedition film and the British documentary, to evidence this. Representing different kinds of racialised performance, inflected by the specific settings and forms of racialised encounter depicted in each genre, these case studies raise different aesthetic and political concerns that are all explored through the racialised bodies that take centre stage.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:60942cec-bec4-41fb-afa5-f6b2161d0cf82024-02-05T10:57:29ZActing imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar BritainThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:60942cec-bec4-41fb-afa5-f6b2161d0cf8British cinemaRaceEnglishHyrax Deposit2023Casey, JDas, SMarcus, L<p>This thesis explores the role of race, racism, and colonialism in British cinema culture of the 1920s and early 1930s. It argues firstly that silent film performance is received as a racialised element of film form in Britain; race is ‘read’ by British audiences into movements, gestures, and expressions. This is inflected by colonial constructions of racialised bodies and imperial geographies: the intimacies and distances between racialised groups that theorists argue underpin racial difference. Whereas many scholars have demonstrated that interwar British cinema entails performances of class, gender and national identities, this thesis foregrounds the performance of racial identity, often in ways which override or obscure these other social distinctions.</p> <p>Secondly, it posits that this performance of racial difference informs constructions of taste, decorum, and style in British cinema. Racialised performance determines perceptions of cinema’s effect on the body—of both performers and spectators—and the way it represents and disseminates British cultural and imperial heritage and history. Through performances of race, British filmmakers and critics construct cinema as entertainment, art form, historical record, and colonial educational tool. This thesis takes the reception and production in Britain of four case study genres, the ‘Eastern’, the Limehouse melodrama, the expedition film and the British documentary, to evidence this. Representing different kinds of racialised performance, inflected by the specific settings and forms of racialised encounter depicted in each genre, these case studies raise different aesthetic and political concerns that are all explored through the racialised bodies that take centre stage.</p>
spellingShingle British cinema
Race
Casey, J
Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title_full Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title_fullStr Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title_full_unstemmed Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title_short Acting imperially: race, performance, and cinema in interwar Britain
title_sort acting imperially race performance and cinema in interwar britain
topic British cinema
Race
work_keys_str_mv AT caseyj actingimperiallyraceperformanceandcinemaininterwarbritain