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Anxiety Muted

American Film Music in a Suburban Age

Anthony Bushard editor Stanley C Pelkey editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:11th Dec '14

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Anxiety Muted cover

The most familiar entertainment icons and storylines from the 1950s and 60s remain potent signs that continue to resonate within contemporary American society and culture. Both the political Left and Right invoke the events and memories of those decades, celebrating or condemning the competing social forces embodied in and unleashed during those years. In recent decades, the entertainment industry has capitalized on this trend with films such as Pleasantville (1998), Far from Heaven (2002), The Hours (2002), Revolutionary Road (2008), and Julie & Julia (2009), and television shows such as Mad Men and Pan Am, all of which have looked back on the 1950s and 1960s with a mixture of nostalgia and criticism. Anxiety Muted: American Film Music in a Suburban Age explores the role of music in American film and television of the 1950s and 1960s, as well as in films from more recent years that reflect upon this period. Throughout the collection, authors use music as a means to interrogate film and television in order to explore how anxieties about issues of community, social codes, gender, family and suburbanization -- all central concerns of the Fifties and Sixties -- have been treated in motion picture media relating to those decades. These references function as signs of the social and political assumptions about the American past that foil contemporary self-understanding. By studying these musical materials through the lens of relevant writings of the 1950s, it demonstrates that specific television shows such as Leave It to Beaver -- often seen as the epitome of Fifties naivety -- offers a more nuanced vision of community and conformity than is usually recognized, revealing much about our own current social anxieties. By focusing on a common set of themes relevant to the time period, Anxiety Muted binds several strands of film studies into a cohesive and engaging introduction to the Fifties and Sixties, its visual media and its music. The book will be of interest to students and scholars of both film music and American music studies.

Ah, the Fifties and Sixties! Even people who weren't there have 'memories' of those terrifically conflicted eras in American culture, and these fourteen essays go a long way toward explaining where that all comes from. * James Wierzbicki, University of Sydney *
Anxiety Muted eloquently demonstrates that the 'suburban age' continues to resonate not simply because it was, despite appearances, the 'age of anxiety' but because this restiveness remains distinctly audible in the music that animates 50s and 60s film and television as well as post-'period' movies and TV shows about 'the Fifties' and 'Sixties.' Anxiety Muted is a wonderful, and wonderfully ear-catching, collection that gives a long overdue hearing to a crucial era of American history and its evocative, still vibrant musical sound track. * Robert Miklitsch, author of Siren City: Sound and Source Music in American Film Noir *
Besides a strong focus on the use of audiovisual media there is also a lot of background information on how the broadcasting business, film editing and character creation used to be handled in the 1950s and 1960s. * Dr. A. Ebert , popcultureshelf.com *

ISBN: 9780199936151

Dimensions: 163mm x 236mm x 23mm

Weight: 567g

320 pages