Details
Souls for Sale
Rupert Hughes and the Novel Hollywood ReligionReel Spirituality Monograph Series
17,99 € |
|
Verlag: | Wipf And Stock Publishers |
Format: | EPUB |
Veröffentl.: | 09.07.2021 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9781725293076 |
Sprache: | englisch |
Anzahl Seiten: | 118 |
DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.
Beschreibungen
The beginning of the twentieth century evolved out of an era of Freethinking atheists and agnostics who challenged the Protestant hegemony of the day. Key among these mavericks was author and filmmaker Rupert Hughes, uncle to Howard Hughes. In 1922, Hughes published Souls for Sale, his wickedly playful satire of the Bible belt and Hollywood, offering a mischievous snapshot of the film industry as it struggled against a conservative Zeitgeist. The novel follows the prodigal adventures of a clergyman's daughter as she stumbles into the movie industry and finds it to be a new and liberating moral universe. Hughes's adaptation of his sly work challenged the religious hierarchy of his day, but ultimately fell by the wayside, even with the support of Hollywood icons like Eric von Stroheim and Charlie Chaplin. Souls for Sale offers a glimpse into the emerging Jazz age of moviemaking against the backdrop of a country moving from its traditional roots into the kinetic ways of Hollywood.
Professor of film, Terry Lindvall, occupies the C. S. Lewis Chair of Communication and Christian Thought at Virginia Wesleyan University and has authored a dozen books, including
<i>The Silents of God</i> (2001),
<i>Sanctuary Cinema </i>(2007),
<i>Divine Film Comedies</i> (2015), and
<i>God Mocks </i>(2016). He is presently producing a feature documentary film on his
<i>God on the Big Screen: A History of Prayer from the Silent Cinema to Today </i>(2019).
<i> <br><br> </i>
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<i>The Silents of God</i> (2001),
<i>Sanctuary Cinema </i>(2007),
<i>Divine Film Comedies</i> (2015), and
<i>God Mocks </i>(2016). He is presently producing a feature documentary film on his
<i>God on the Big Screen: A History of Prayer from the Silent Cinema to Today </i>(2019).
<i> <br><br> </i>
<br>
“Lindvall’s
<i>Souls for Sale</i> is written with style and wit. At the same time that it explores the relation between religion and the movies in the early twentieth century, it shows how, for novelist and director Rupert Hughes, the art of the movie was
<i>itself</i> sacred. The book is a pleasure to read and illuminates a too-little-known period of American filmmaking.”
<br>
<br> —Theresa Sanders, associate professor, Theology and Religious Studies, Georgetown University
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br> “Terry Lindvall’s fascinating
<i>Souls for Sale</i> shines a spotlight on the changing Hollywood scene in 1922—the year writer Rupert Hughes’s satirical treatment of traditional Christianity became a motion picture. Who better than Rupert Hughes, already notorious for his outspoken atheistic opinions, to mock Middle America by suggesting that Hollywood, the new film capital, had replaced the church as its most sacred place. . . . This book provides a fascinating background to the beginnings of censorship by the Production Code Administration. . . . I warmly welcome Lindvall’s new book, which explains how the culture wars began in Hollywood in the roaring twenties; it is an easy read.”
<br>
<br> —Andrew Quicke, Professor of Film, Graduate School of Communication and the Arts, Regent University
<br>
<i>Souls for Sale</i> is written with style and wit. At the same time that it explores the relation between religion and the movies in the early twentieth century, it shows how, for novelist and director Rupert Hughes, the art of the movie was
<i>itself</i> sacred. The book is a pleasure to read and illuminates a too-little-known period of American filmmaking.”
<br>
<br> —Theresa Sanders, associate professor, Theology and Religious Studies, Georgetown University
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br> “Terry Lindvall’s fascinating
<i>Souls for Sale</i> shines a spotlight on the changing Hollywood scene in 1922—the year writer Rupert Hughes’s satirical treatment of traditional Christianity became a motion picture. Who better than Rupert Hughes, already notorious for his outspoken atheistic opinions, to mock Middle America by suggesting that Hollywood, the new film capital, had replaced the church as its most sacred place. . . . This book provides a fascinating background to the beginnings of censorship by the Production Code Administration. . . . I warmly welcome Lindvall’s new book, which explains how the culture wars began in Hollywood in the roaring twenties; it is an easy read.”
<br>
<br> —Andrew Quicke, Professor of Film, Graduate School of Communication and the Arts, Regent University
<br>