Adapting Henry James to the Screen: Gender, Fiction, and FilmScarecrow Press, 2007 - 297 "This book shows how changing priorities affected the ways in which James's novels were translated to the screen and how gender relations were addressed. Raw discusses most of the major adaptations, beginning with Berkeley Square (1933) and culminating with James Ivory's The Golden Bowl (2000). This book also offers new readings of well-known adaptations and considers works that have been critically neglected, such as The Lost Moment (1947), The House in the Square (1951), The Haunting of Hell House (1999), and the four television versions of The Turn of the Screw produced between 1974 and 1999. Adapting Henry James to the Screen is the most comprehensive survey published on James's work on film and television."--Jacket. |
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Strona vii
... editing and preparing this book for publication . Lastly , I would like to pay special tribute to three people . Jim and Anne Welsh , sometime editors of Literature Film Quarterly , have not only helped bring this project to fruition ...
... editing and preparing this book for publication . Lastly , I would like to pay special tribute to three people . Jim and Anne Welsh , sometime editors of Literature Film Quarterly , have not only helped bring this project to fruition ...
Strona 44
... editing , and sets . He collaborated with Horner to create authentic period settings ( a strategy that would become much more familiar in James adapta- tions from the 1970s onwards ) that would not give the secrets of the story away ...
... editing , and sets . He collaborated with Horner to create authentic period settings ( a strategy that would become much more familiar in James adapta- tions from the 1970s onwards ) that would not give the secrets of the story away ...
Strona 69
... editor of the Literary History of the United States ( 1949 ) : " A reader who wishes to . . . see in the harassed governess a sex- starved spinster . . . must ignore some of James's deliberately contrived con- trols . . . [ such as ] ...
... editor of the Literary History of the United States ( 1949 ) : " A reader who wishes to . . . see in the harassed governess a sex- starved spinster . . . must ignore some of James's deliberately contrived con- trols . . . [ such as ] ...
Spis treści
Chapter 2 | 30 |
The Heiress 1949 | 39 |
Ill Never Forget You 1951 | 51 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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