Joseph Losey

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-03-01
Publisher(s): Manchester University Press
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Summary

The career of Wisconsin-born Joseph Losey spanned over four decades and several countries. A self-proclaimed Marxist and veteran of the 1930s Soviet agit-prop theater, he collaborated with Bertholt Brecht before directing noir B-pictures in Hollywood. A victim of McCarthyism, he later crossed the Atlantic to direct a series of seminal British films such as Time Without Pity, Eve, The Servant, and The Go-Between, which mark him as one of the cinema's greatest baroque stylists. His British films reflect on exile and the outsider's view of a class-bound society in crisis through a style rooted in the European art house tradition of Resnais and Godard. Gardner employs recent methodologies from cultural studies and poststructural theory, exploring and clarifying the films' uneasy tension between class and gender, and their explorations of fractured temporality.

Author Biography

Colin Gardner is Associate Professor in Critical Theory and Interdisciplinary Media at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Table of Contents

LIST OF PLATES vi
SERIES EDITORS' FOREWORD ix
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS x
1 Introduction: Joseph Losey and the crisis of historical rupture
1(13)
2 Losey in exile: The Sleeping Tiger (1954), A Man on the Beach (1955) and The Intimate Stranger (1956)
14(26)
3 A question of background: class and the politics of impulse in Time Without Pity (1957), The Gypsy and the Gentleman (1957), Blind Date (1959) and The Criminal (1960)
40(52)
4 Dystopic malevolence and the politics of collusion: Evan Jones's The Damned (1961), Eve (1962), King and Country (1964) and Modesty Blaise (1966)
92(42)
5 Harold Pinter's time-image: The Servant (1963), Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1971)
134(46)
6 Three allegorical fables: Boom! (1968), Secret Ceremony (1968) and Figures in a Landscape (1970)
180(32)
7 Bertolt Brecht and Galileo (1974)
212(19)
8 Gender matters: A Doll's House (1973), The Romantic Englishwoman (1975) and Steaming (1985)
231(32)
9 A second exile: Losey in Europe
263(10)
10 Conclusion 273(5)
THEATRE CREDITS AND FILMOGRAPHY 278(21)
BIBLIOGRAPHY 299(8)
INDEX 307

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