This essay examines the differences between American and British modernity around the turn of the twentieth century. The author argues that American modernity tended to paradoxically embrace what was considered premodern, while British modernity sought to more clearly dichotomize what was perceived as rural primitivity and civil British modernity. To elucidate these ideological differences, theories of modernity and antimodernity are addressed in tandem with close textual analyses of early film reenactments of the South African War (1899–1902). While British film reenactments of the South African War tended to reify British imperialism, American films were often ideologically ambivalent, thus providing more of an opportunity for American ex...
This dissertation argues that discussions of war representation that privilege the nationalistic, he...
Restricted until 05 Dec. 2011.This thesis seeks to write a comprehensive history of documentary film...
The article discusses the features of the evolution on the silver screen so-called "white man's burd...
In the late-nineteenth century, Britain saw the development of a mass culture consumed by a new publ...
This thesis explores the myriad ways films can contribute to our understanding of historical events ...
This thesis explores the early years of the British documentary movement as it formed within the Emp...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
This dissertation charts the ways in which the non-West came to be thought of as part of the modern ...
The renewed interest in empire, particularly in its British and American variants, has brought into ...
The representational politics of European colonial cinema was effectively decisive in shaping the va...
This essay evaluates some of the challenges and opportunities posed by comparative history of cinema...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
Imperial history in general received very little attention in British universities until the 1950s. ...
The Empire Question at the start of the twentieth century was not simply a matter of whether the U.S...
The Colonial Film Unit (CFU) (1939–1955) produced over 200 films, which were exhibited non-theatrica...
This dissertation argues that discussions of war representation that privilege the nationalistic, he...
Restricted until 05 Dec. 2011.This thesis seeks to write a comprehensive history of documentary film...
The article discusses the features of the evolution on the silver screen so-called "white man's burd...
In the late-nineteenth century, Britain saw the development of a mass culture consumed by a new publ...
This thesis explores the myriad ways films can contribute to our understanding of historical events ...
This thesis explores the early years of the British documentary movement as it formed within the Emp...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
This dissertation charts the ways in which the non-West came to be thought of as part of the modern ...
The renewed interest in empire, particularly in its British and American variants, has brought into ...
The representational politics of European colonial cinema was effectively decisive in shaping the va...
This essay evaluates some of the challenges and opportunities posed by comparative history of cinema...
This collection adopts a broad conception of “conflict” by examining sites of conflict which include...
Imperial history in general received very little attention in British universities until the 1950s. ...
The Empire Question at the start of the twentieth century was not simply a matter of whether the U.S...
The Colonial Film Unit (CFU) (1939–1955) produced over 200 films, which were exhibited non-theatrica...
This dissertation argues that discussions of war representation that privilege the nationalistic, he...
Restricted until 05 Dec. 2011.This thesis seeks to write a comprehensive history of documentary film...
The article discusses the features of the evolution on the silver screen so-called "white man's burd...