Description
Steve Ross has written an absorbing and important book about a time when working-class life and working-class filmmakers occupied a central place in American cinema. I strongly recommend that anyone interested in the politics of American film read this book. -- Michael Moore, Director of "Roger and Me" and "TV Nation"
About the Author
Steven J. Ross is Professor of History at the University of Southern California, where he teaches courses in American Social History and popular culture. He is the author of Workers on the Edge: Work, Leisure, and Politics in Industrializing Cincinnati, 1788-1890, and has published numerous articles on film history, labor history, and social history.
Reviews
Winner of the 1999 Book Award, Theatre Library Association One of Los Angeles Times's Best Nonfiction Books for 1998 "One of the satisfactions in reading Working-Class Hollywood is that the author is as happily polemical as his subjects and not afraid to take sides. This gives his impressively researched and annotated book a scrappy, personal tone that is refreshing to find in a work of such academic weight."--Los Angeles Times "A breakthrough volume in terms of American film history."--Vancouver Sun "A rigorously researched and refreshingly accessible book."--The Nation "Working-Class Hollywood is ... a meticulous and beautifully accomplished re-creation of the lost world of labor and radical films... No one reading this masterly new study can look at nearly a century of movie making in quite the same way again."--Journal of American History "Working-class Hollywood, Steven J. Ross has gone a long way to show, is an oxymoron. Ross has uncovered a lively scene of decentralized, diversified production in the early motion picture business."--Michael Rogin, American Historical Review "A vividly written chronicle of multi-faceted struggles over the meaning of class in American life as they took shape in silent film... By analyzing the range of perspectives on class in early feature films, Ross provides a nuanced picture of the ways class issues and class relations were defined for movie audiences... [A] rich, well-researched monograph ... [and a] provocative and informative book."--Kathryn J. Oberdeck, Reviews in American History "An impassioned celebration of a movement that depicted social issues at the birth of the big screen... A valuable addition to cinema history... "--Kirkus Review "Steeped in labor and class history, sweetened by a perceptive moviegoer's parsing of onscreen images, Working-Class Hollywood is a fascinating study of how movies make us."--Washington Post Book World "Steven J. Ross spent a decade laboring on Working-Class Hollywood, and it shows on every page. It is a phenomenally well-researched study ... And yet is highly readable, without a hint of droning pedantry."--Ben Singer, Modernism/Modernity "Steven J. Ross has an important story to tell, and he tells it with great passion and conviction."--Peter Kramer, Labour History Review
Awards
Short-listed for Theatre Library Association Award 1999 and Los Angeles Book Festival Prize: General Non-Fiction 1998.
Book Information
ISBN 9780691024646
Author Steven J. Ross
Format Paperback
Page Count 392
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 539g