Introduction
Part I (1917-1928) From the Screen to the Page: “Goin’ to the movies…” in the Great War
Chapter 1
Dos Passos and Soviet Filmmakers: Meyerhold, Vertov, Eisenstein, and the Development of Montage
Chapter 2
Dos Passos and U.S. Film: D.W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation (1915), and Hearts of the World (1918)
Chapter 3
“Propaganda for peace”: Film and Narrative in One Man’s Initiation: 1917 (1920) and Three Soldiers (1921)
Part II (1934-37) From Paramount Studios to the Spanish Front: Writing Hollywood, Filming History
Chapter 4
“[T]he world’s greatest center of…propaganda”: Hollywood and The Devil Is a Woman
Chapter 5
Dos Passos and Joris Ivens: “Dreamfactory” and Meta-film
Chapter 6
Dos Passos, Ivens, and Hemingway: The Spanish Earth and the Death of Jose Robles
Chapter 7
“Go home and try to tell the truth”: Revision and Reception of The Spanish Earth
Part III (1947-70) U.S.A. From Page to Stage to Screens: Political and Structural Revisions
Chapter 8
Filmic Narrative Into Narrative Film: Dos Passos Drafting U.S.A. for the Screen (1947-56)
Chapter 9
Negotiation and Adaptation: U.S.A. Under Option, Adapted for Television, and Produced for the Stage (1959-60)
Chapter 10
Early Aesthetics Through the Lens of Late Politics
(1960-70)
After faculty positions at University of North Carolina affiliates and Georgetown University School of Foreign Service-Qatar, Lisa Nanney co-edited and co-authored the 2017 study of John Dos Passos’s visual works, The Paintings and Drawings of John Dos Passos: A Collection and Study (Clemson University Press). Her current book, John Dos Passos and Cinema (2019), further explores the intersection of his narrative methods and the visual arts by investigating his writing directly for the cinema, his translation of modernist fictional techniques to the screen, and the ways these forays into film writing were shaped by his re-evaluation of the Left at a pivotal point in his career. Nanney is also the author of John Dos Passos Revisited (Macmillan Press, 1998), a critical biography.
'A rich and engrossing book... John Dos Passos and Cinema will be
the authoritative work on this aspect of Dos Passos's career and
aesthetics for some time. But it also provides fresh insights into
the perennial topic of his political biography and his shift to the
right, as well as providing superb detail on the specifics of the
networks and aesthetics of transnational, intermedial experiment on
the left that galvanized modernist culture in the 1920s and
1930s.'
Mark Whalan, Modernism/modernity
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