The Film Photonovel

A Cultural History of Forgotten Adaptations

Jan Baetens author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Texas Press

Published:15th Apr '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Film Photonovel cover

Discarded by archivists and disregarded by scholars despite its cultural impact on post–World War II Europe, the film photonovel represents a unique crossroads. This hybrid medium presented popular films in a magazine format that joined film stills or set pictures with captions and dialogue balloons to re-create a cinematic story, producing a tremendously popular blend of cinema and text that supported more than two dozen weekly or monthly publications.

Illuminating a long-overlooked ‘lowbrow’ medium with a significant social impact, The Film Photonovel studies the history of the format as a hybrid of film novelizations, drawn novels, and nonfilm photonovels. While the field of adaptation studies has tended to focus on literary adaptations, this book explores how the juxtaposition of words and pictures functioned in this format and how page layout and photo cropping could affect reading. Finally, the book follows the film photonovel's brief history in Latin America and the United States. Adding an important dimension to the interactions between filmmakers and their audiences, this work fills a gap in the study of transnational movie culture.

Baetens' keen eye and deep scholarly understanding of word and image narrative brings out the gems in [the film photonovel genre]...This richly illustrated book, with clear and engaging prose, is both an important contribution to the widening field of adaptation studies and a model of medium-specific analysis that considers a form's unique historical materiality to be in complex relationship with its remediation of past genres. * Leonardo *
It is to be hoped that this first study of the film photonovel will not remain a one-shot in the field. Baetens’s book has already proven, however, to be a game changer. * French Review *
This elegantly written, thoroughly documented and richly illustrated volume is a first step in stimulating further research that poses critical questions concerning issues of narratology and narrativity while expanding the range of possible debates in genre, medium, adaptation and transmediation studies. The Film Photonovel is, and will remain for a long time, an indispensable resource for literary and cultural study scholars, especially those involved in exploring the complex processes of remediation and adaptation that underlie the mechanics of popular culture in its manifold expressions, environments and constituencies. * Visual Studies *
Baetens explores the many ways in which films were adapted, with a focus on page layout, the choice of images and the use of dialogue and narration...We are left with the impression that most adaptations failed to do their source material justice. * Times Literary Supplement *
Baetens offers a refreshing and valuable contribution to visual culture studies by examining and historicizing, with great sophistication and theoretical depth, this long-forgotten hybrid medium.... Passionate in nature and elegant in style, it is the field expanding conclusions to The Film Photonovel that constantly captivate the reader, conclusions that result from Baetens’ sophisticated cultural, semiological, material and narratological analysis of this prolific genre. * Journal of Visual Culture *
Baetens fills a critical gap in scholarship regarding the relatively neglected medium of film photonovels...[The Film Photonovel is] a phenomenal resource that would be an excellent read for any scholar interested in adaptation studies, film studies, or comics’ studies. The curiously underresearched film photonovel provides an intriguing intersection between the three aforementioned fields....an extremely thorough and well-argued book. This book is quite enlightening; as the fields of literary and cultural studies shift toward examining genres once discarded as 'lowbrow,' we may well see an increased interest in this once-neglected medium. Baetens does a fantastic job establishing the framework for this academic niche. * Journal of Popular Culture *

ISBN: 9781477318225

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm

Weight: 426g

198 pages