Animation and America

Front Cover
Rutgers University Press, 2002 - Computers - 185 pages
The "cartoon"in the output of the all conquering Disney studio, the anarchic antics of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck in Looney Tunes, and the satiric vision of the Simpsons on television is synonymous with the United States, but the genre rarely is taken seriously. Nevertheless, cartoons are important artistic and cultural achievements, and are an essential ingredient in how America is viewed, both by itself and by others.

In Animation and America, Paul Wells looks afresh at this unique art, discussing the distinctiveness of the cartoon form, as well as myriad other types of animation production. Insisting upon the "modernity" of the genre, Wells examines its importance as a barometer of the social conditions in which it is made and which it reflects. This book is not a standard history of animation in America, but rather uses animation as a way of discussing social and political change. Wells concentrates on the ways in which the form continues to grow, experiment, and remain subversiveand, increasingly, gaining acclaim and recognition. Now in the vanguard of visual culture, animation occupies an important position in representing both the outcomes and impacts of new technologies, and it also has laid the foundations for a new understanding of social and artistic practice.

 

Contents

Animation and Modernism
19
The Disney Effect
38
Synaesthetics Subversion Television
60
New Disney Old Stories?
102
New Animation Auteurs
126
United States of the Art
151
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

Paul Wells has published widely in the field of animation. He is the author of Understanding Animation and Art and Animation. He also teaches at the University of Teesside (U.K.).

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