How Protestants Molded Hollywood’s Moral Qualms
posted November 30, 2012
Film-ratings systems in the United States have a history of contention.
But one aspect of the first attempts at imposing a code, in the 1930s, has been largely overlooked, writes William D. Romanowski in Reforming Hollywood: How American Protestants Fought for Freedom at the Movies, which Oxford University Press issued in July 2012.
Well documented, notes the ...
Soviet Witness to the Holocaust
posted November 29, 2012
Images of the Nazi atrocities of World War II haunted the second half of the 20th century, and continue to do so, in the 21st.
But not all the film and photography of those events has been available to historians and the public. Jeremy Hicks set out to expand the visual record of the Holocaust by ...
New Books, and Lots of Them
posted November 26, 2012
You’ll find descriptions of plenty of new and recent books relating to moving-image archiving on our books pages.
You can also read about how authors went about the archival tasks needed to complete two of those books: The Cinema and Cinema-Going in Scotland, 1896-1950 and Reel Time: Movie Exhibitors and Movie Audiences in Prairie Canada, 1896 ...
The Scots Go to the Movies, and How
posted November 26, 2012
Trevor Griffiths had a wide-open research topic when he decided to write a book about Scottish film-going habits of the early 20th century and to set them in social and historical context.
In his new book, The Cinema and Cinema-Going in Scotland, 1896-1950, from Edinburgh University Press, distributed in the US by Columbia University Press), Griffiths, ...
Movies on the Canadian Prairie
posted November 26, 2012
“At times,” say Tamara P. Seiler and Robert M. Seiler, “it felt as if we were chronicling the history of western culture.” They didn’t expect that, when they set out in 2000 to investigate the history of movies in Prairie Canada during the early days of film.
Their ambitious project has now borne fruit in their new ...
New Books on Moving Image Works
posted November 20, 2012
The Open Video Project’s Dual Purposes
posted November 14, 2012
Sooner or later, we will all have access to large digital libraries of video.
The dream is for such access not only to come about, but to be easy. Free, would be nice. Many historical, research, and educational collections are already providing unhindered public access, at least for viewing and sometimes for download.
So, three core factors ...

