Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from Clovis to Nixon

White Shadows: Race, Erotics, Violence and Power of Global Hollywood

This series of essays is about the mass-mediated production of power that took place in 20th-century "Hollywood," and the ways that movie making and movie watching are always real actions in a political world. 

For well over a century, mass media have transformed the cultural, economic, and political life of the human world.   Los Angeles has produced a commanding flow of the world's media from its beginning leadership of cinematic production circa 1915, to the present day.  Therefore--in a nearly perfect syllogism--
Los Angeles must have had a major role in shaping the cultural, economic, and political life of the human world.  How it played that role, to what ends, are the crucial questions, to which these essays are dedicated.

“The Problem of the Twentieth Century,” W.E.B. DuBois famously declared in 1901, “is the problem of the Color Line.”  Feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman added that the other problem of the 20th century was the rule of patriarchy.  In world politics, the menace of fascism rose to threaten democracy and civil society under a reign of terror.  These essays map Hollywood's accountability for all three of these core problems of the 20th century: racism, sexism, and fascism, and how Hollywood generated new, carnographic forms of power in the bloodbaths of the 20th century.

This page has paths:

  1. Narrative Paths Phil Ethington
  2. Ghost Metropolis: Los Angeles from Clovis to Nixon Phil Ethington
  3. Networks Phil Ethington

Contents of this path:

  1. Manufacturing Mass Culture, 1895-1950s
  2. American Pulp Fascism: 1912-1930s
  3. White Shadows: Imperial Hollywood, 1920s-1930s
  4. Bloodbath: New Hollywood, New Right, and the Carnography of Power, 1940s to 1980s
  5. Moby-Dick: On the White Maleness of Hollywood
  6. Bibliography for White Shadows

This page is referenced by: