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영문목차
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
1. The Origins of Governmental Film Censorship, 1907-1923 17
2. The Courts Provide No Relief, 1909-1927 39
3. Hollywood and the Legion of Decency, 1922-1934 51
4. Early Challenges to State Censors, 1927-1940 65
5. The First Amendment Resurfaces, 1946-1950 89
6. The Stratege Case of The Miracle, 1950-1952 107
7. La Ronde, 1951-1954 149
8. The Tide Turns against the Censors, 1953-1957 175
9. The Seventh Case in Seven Years, 1957-1959 197
10. The Curtain Coming DOwn, 1957-1964 217
11. Fight for Freedom of the Screen, 1962-1965 231
12. Denouement, 1965-1981 247
Conclusion 273
Notes 283
Selected Bibliogrpahy 331
Index 343
등록번호 | 청구기호 | 권별정보 | 자료실 | 이용여부 |
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0001316290 | 344.730531 W829f | 서울관 법률정보센터(206호) | 이용중 |
At the turn of the twentieth century, the proliferation of movies attracted not only the attention of audiences across America but also the apprehensive eyes of government officials and special interest groups concerned about the messages disseminated by the silver screen. Between 1907 and 1926, seven states—New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, Kansas, Maryland, and Massachusetts—and more than one hundred cities authorized censors to suppress all images and messages considered inappropriate for American audiences. Movie studios, hoping to avoid problems with state censors, worrying that censorship might be extended to the federal level, and facing increased pressure from religious groups, also jumped into the censoring business, restraining content through the adoption of the self-censoring Production Code, also known as the Hays code.
But some industry outsiders, independent distributors who believed that movies deserved the free speech protections of the First Amendment, brought legal challenges to censorship at the state and local levels. Freedom of the Screen chronicles both the evolution of judicial attitudes toward film restriction and the plight of the individuals who fought for the right to deliver provocative and relevant movies to American audiences.
The path to cinematic freedom was marked with both achievements and roadblocks, from the establishment of the Production Code Administration, which effectively eradicated political films after 1934, to the landmark cases over films such as The Miracle (1948), La ronde (1950), and Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1955) that paved the way for increased freedom of expression. As the fight against censorship progressed case by case through state courts and the U.S. Supreme Court, legal authorities and the public responded, growing increasingly sympathetic toward artistic freedom. Because a small, unorganized group of independent film distributors and exhibitors in mid-twentieth-century America fought back against what they believed was the unconstitutional prior restraint of motion pictures, film after 1965 was able to follow a new path, maturing into an artistic medium for the communication of ideas, however controversial. Government censors would no longer control the content of America’s movie screens.
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