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 254
... Verver , or James Ivory himself — who subscribes to the con- sumerist fantasy that the display of material possessions alone ( including costumes ) can satisfy human desires . However , it soon becomes clear that Ivory is well aware of ...
... Verver , or James Ivory himself — who subscribes to the con- sumerist fantasy that the display of material possessions alone ( including costumes ) can satisfy human desires . However , it soon becomes clear that Ivory is well aware of ...
Strona 255
... Verver's scheme of things , the paint- ing assumes more importance than his wife , being both larger and more visually striking . Charlotte acknowledges this later in the film as she escorts a party of visitors around Verver's house and ...
... Verver's scheme of things , the paint- ing assumes more importance than his wife , being both larger and more visually striking . Charlotte acknowledges this later in the film as she escorts a party of visitors around Verver's house and ...
Strona 256
... Verver's voyage across the Atlantic and subsequent arrival in American City . It begins with a sequence of early 1900s newsreel extracts showing an ocean liner and its passengers at sea and subsequently arriving in New York . This is ...
... Verver's voyage across the Atlantic and subsequent arrival in American City . It begins with a sequence of early 1900s newsreel extracts showing an ocean liner and its passengers at sea and subsequently arriving in New York . This is ...
Spis treści
Chapter 2 | 30 |
The Heiress 1949 | 39 |
Ill Never Forget You 1951 | 51 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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