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Film Studies   Tags: film, film_journals, filmmaking, media, mediacenter, movies, videos  

Film Studies Subject Guide for the College of William and Mary. Librarian for Film Studies: Troy Davis. Start your film studies research here!
Last Updated: Apr 16, 2013 URL: http://guides.swem.wm.edu/film Print Guide RSS UpdatesEmail AlertsShareThis

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NEW!!!

NEW: AMERICAN HISTORY IN VIDEO

American History in Video provides the largest and richest collection of video available online for the study of American history, with 2,000 hours and more than 5,000 titles on completion. The collection allows students and researchers to analyze historical events, and their presentation over time, through commercial and governmental newsreels, archival footage, public affairs footage, and important documentaries. This release now provides 5,752 titles, equaling approximately 1,482 hours.

 

Film Studies Resource Highlight

Film and television : a guide to the reference literature
Emmons, Mark. Westport, Conn. : Libraries Unlimited, c2006.

Review (From Choice)
(December 01, 2006)

"Emmons's passion for the large and small screen is evident in this annotated bibliography of reference sources, for which he personally examined and described over 1,200 resources. Recognizing that movies and television are now legitimate areas of growing scholarly analysis, his work identifies print titles (exhaustively) and free and subscription Web sites (selectively). Beyond the standard bibliographies, encyclopedias, and even filmographies, works are organized by topic. The longest chapter, "Genres," is 93 pages of resources. Other chapters include "Studios" (by name; mostly US); "Portrayals" (about gender, race, and class); "Making Films and Television Programs" (exploring technical aspects); "Film and Television Industry" (from a more popular point of view); and a short section titled "Fans and Audience." Emmons (library, Univ. of New Mexico) reluctantly limits himself to English-language publications (but spends 46 pages on worldwide cinema) and excludes journalism, individuals and individual works, memorabilia, and trivia. Brief explanatory topic introductions precede carefully done, insightful source annotations that speak to quality, currency, and uniqueness. Appendixes provide bonuses: recommended LC subject headings; LC Moving Image Genre/Form List; a breakdown of LC classification PN1900 by subject, then by classification number, followed by similar information for Dewey. An excellent guide for researchers." Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and above. L. B. Harris University of South Carolina Lancaster

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