List of Illustrations viii
Notes on Contributors ix
Preface xiv
Acknowledgments xvi
1 Novels, Films, and the Word/Image Wars 1
Kamilla Elliott
2 Sacred Word, Profane Image: Theologies of Adaptation 23
Ella Shohat
3 Gospel Truth? From Cecil B. DeMille to Nicholas Ray 46
Pamela Grace
4 Transécriture and Narrative Mediatics: The Stakes of
Intermediality 58
André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion
5 The Look: From Film to Novel. An Essay in Comparative
Narratology 71
François Jost
6 Adaptation and Mis-adaptations: Film, Literature, and Social
Discourses 81
Francesco Casetti
7 The Invisible Novelty: Film Adaptations in the 1910s 92
Yuri Tsivian
8 Italy and America: Pinocchio’s First Cinematic Trip 112
Raffaele De Berti
9 The Intertextuality of Early Cinema: A Prologue to Fantômas
127
Tom Gunning
10 Cosmopolitan Projections: World Literature on Chinese Screens
144
Zhang Zhen
11 The Rhetoric of Interruption 164
Allen S. Weiss
12 Visualizing the Voice: Joyce, Cinema, and the Politics of
Vision 171
Luke Gibbons
13 Adapting Cinema to History: A Revolution in the Making
189
Dudley Andrew
14 Photographic Verismo, Cinematic Adaptation, and the Staging
of a Neorealist Landscape 205
Noa Steimatsky
15 The Devil’s Parody: Horace McCoy’s Appropriation and
Refiguration of Two Hollywood Musicals 229
Charles Musser
16 The Sociological Turn of Adaptation Studies: The Example of
Film Noir 258
R. Barton Palmer
17 Adapting Farewell, My Lovely 278
William Luhr
18 Daphne du Maurier and Alfred Hitchcock 298
Richard Allen
19 Running Time: The Chronotope of The Loneliness of the Long
Distance Runner 326
Peter Hitchcock
20 From Libertinage to Eric Rohmer: Transcending “Adaptation”
343
Maria Tortajada
21 The Moment of Portraiture: Scorsese Reads Wharton 358
Brigitte Peucker
22 The Talented Poststructuralist: Hetero-masculinity, Gay
Artifice, and Class Passing 368
Chris Straayer
23 From Bram Stoker’s Dracula to Bram Stoker’s “Dracula” 385
Margaret Montalbano
24 The Bible as Cultural Object(s) in Cinema 399
Gavriel Moses
25 All’s Wells that Ends Wells: Apocalypse and Empire in The War
of the Worlds 423
Julian Cornell
Index 448
Robert Stam is University Professor at New York University.
His many books include Film Theory: An Introduction (Blackwell,
2000), Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism and the Media
(with Ella Shohat, 1994), and Subversive Pleasures: Bakhtin,
Cultural Criticism and Film (1989). With Toby Miller, he is the
editor of Film and Theory (Blackwell, 2000) and The Blackwell
Companion to Film Theory (2000).
Alessandra Raengo is finishing her PhD in the Cinema Studies Department at New York University, where she occasionally teaches. Her dissertation explores race and vernacular social criticism in American culture between 1945 and 1968. Among her publications are The Birth of Film Genres (1999) and The Bounds of Representation (2000), both multilingual volumes edited with Leonardo Quaresima and Laura Vichi.
“This volume stands as a model for consolidating studies of film
and literature. It demonstrates that this field of intellectual
inquiry, as it has developed over the last 15 years, encompasses
the highbrow and the low; first and third world subject matter;
issues of audience as well as authorship; and a commitment to
interdisciplinarity. This collection will be useful for all kinds
of readers: scholars, undergraduates, and all those who take
seriously the pleasures provided by movies and novels.”
Eric Smoodin, University of California at Davis
“To anyone believing the discussion of novel-into-film had been
exhausted a generation ago, A Companion to Literature and Film will
come as a welcome surprise. Each of the twenty-five brilliantly
argued case studies shows a level of conceptual clarity and
interdisciplinary range that is astonishing. Scholars will find
that this book bristles with ideas, while newcomers to the debates
have an indispensable and expert guide.”
Thomas Elsaesser, University of Amsterdam
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