纸的束缚:第一次世界大战期间的女孩粉丝,电影剪贴簿和好莱坞接待

Diana W. Anselmo
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引用次数: 4

摘要

摘要:随着20世纪10年代商业叙事电影的出现,同人媒介的发展在很大程度上要归功于年轻女性受众。然而,对这些早期粉丝群体的深入了解很少,默片历史学家在很大程度上没有研究过。这篇文章聚焦于第一次世界大战期间北美的电影女孩们制作的纸质剪贴簿、教程和信件,追溯了蓬勃发展的男性主导的电影工业与第一批被文化称为“青少年”和“屏幕迷”的人口之间建立的张力关系。通过对来自各行各业的女孩主导的电影集体的第一人称叙述,我介绍了一个丰富多样的,如果大部分是未知的,接待档案,展示了观众参与,消费者参与,同伴归属和情感颠覆的形成模式,这些模式是由历史上被认为微不足道或没有生产力的观众产生的。将个人粉丝物品与报纸上敦促女孩们重新利用短暂电影的文章结合起来阅读也表明,第一次世界大战的爆发重新调整了电影观众和美国媒体对合适的电影粉丝和有用的女性劳动力的看法。年轻的女性观众由于对这些照片的热情依恋而引人注目和有价值,她们被招募参与战争救济工作,她们的纸工艺品和国内的升级回收,为全国范围内关于资源短缺、公共女性机构和西方文明衰落的辩论做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bound by Paper: Girl Fans, Movie Scrapbooks, and Hollywood Reception during World War I
ABSTRACT:Fan media practices, shaped by the advent of commercial narrative cinema in the 1910s, owe much to young female audiences. However, in-depth knowledge of these early fan communities is slim, having gone largely unexamined by silent-film historians. Focused on paper-based scrapbooks, tutorials, and correspondence crafted by movie-loving girls coming of age in North America during World War I, this article traces the tensile relationship established between a burgeoning male-presided film industry and the first demographic to be culturally addressed as “adolescent” and “screen-struck.” By privileging first-person accounts of girl-led movie collectives from assorted walks of life, I introduce a richly diverse, if mostly unknown, reception archive that showcases the formative modes of spectatorial engagement, consumer participation, peer belonging, and affective subversiveness engendered by an audience historically deemed negligible or unproductive. Reading personal fan objects in tandem with newspaper articles urging girls to reuse film ephemera also reveals that the outbreak of World War I recalibrated how moviegoers and the US press conceived of appropriate film fandom and useful female labor. Visible and valuable due to their passionate attachment to the pictures, young female audiences came to be recruited to participate in war-relief efforts, their paper crafts and domestic upcycling contributing to the nationwide debate on resource scarcity, public female agency, and the decline of western civilization.
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