Ralph Ellison and Cinema
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Anthem Press
Publishing:3rd Jun '25
£20.99
This title is due to be published on 3rd June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
First dedicated study of the relation between cinema and the work of African American author Ralph Ellison (1913–-1994).
The first dedicated study of the relation between cinema and the work of African American author Ralph Ellison (1913–1994).
Ralph Ellison and Cinema reveals the crucial role of cinema throughout Ellison’s career. In his most famous work, Invisible Man (1952), cinema is part of a cultural and institutional landscape; as such, it is integral to the way the novel’s protagonist feels and thinks. In Ellison’s critical essays, cinema is simultaneously a crystallization of racial prejudice, a vehicle of ideas about history, and an index of the variously illusory and the revelatory character of dreams. But it is in his monumental, unfinished second novel, posthumously published as Three Days Before the Shooting . . . (2010), that Ellison’s thinking about cinema is brought to its imaginative and theoretical peak. Here, Ellison gives full rein to a sensibility that is both cinephile and cine-sceptical; in the book, Ellison is as much concerned with cinematic form as he is with cinematic content. To chart the breadth and depth of Ellison’s cinematic interests, Ralph Ellison and Cinema discusses the author’s major works alongside private correspondence, Hollywood films in which Ellison took particular interest, and marginalia in the author’s personal library. Ralph Ellison and Cinema also provides a detailed account of the intellectual and social contexts in which Ellison’s works took shape.
ISBN: 9781785279638
Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 26mm
Weight: 454g
250 pages