Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule

Southern melodrama can be understood as a generic enclave rooted in traditional melodrama which borrows from the Western genre not only its interrelated historical framework, particular rites, but its recognizable characters, decors, costumes and coded situations. The...

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Main Author: Christian Viviani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines 2018-07-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9239
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spelling doaj-b21cb111c86040c19423e9acc27c1c6a2021-10-02T07:46:50ZengMaison de la Recherche en Sciences HumainesRevue LISA1762-61532018-07-0110.4000/lisa.9239Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépusculeChristian VivianiSouthern melodrama can be understood as a generic enclave rooted in traditional melodrama which borrows from the Western genre not only its interrelated historical framework, particular rites, but its recognizable characters, decors, costumes and coded situations. The geographic situation of the South with its complex history enable more or less perceptible shifts from the Southern to the Western. Dooming to failure the hegemonic self-delusion of the white Southern master and the revengeful white trash characters, disenchanted “twilight Westerns” announce the ideological challenge that marked the Westerns of the 1960s and 1970s. The premonitory intuition of these films constitutes the red thread of the present article.http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9239American cinemamelodramaSouthSouthernWestern
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Viviani
spellingShingle Christian Viviani
Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
Revue LISA
American cinema
melodrama
South
Southern
Western
author_facet Christian Viviani
author_sort Christian Viviani
title Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
title_short Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
title_full Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
title_fullStr Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
title_full_unstemmed Passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : Southern et Western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
title_sort passée la porte, il n’y a rien que du vent : southern et western, du désenchantement au crépuscule
publisher Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines
series Revue LISA
issn 1762-6153
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Southern melodrama can be understood as a generic enclave rooted in traditional melodrama which borrows from the Western genre not only its interrelated historical framework, particular rites, but its recognizable characters, decors, costumes and coded situations. The geographic situation of the South with its complex history enable more or less perceptible shifts from the Southern to the Western. Dooming to failure the hegemonic self-delusion of the white Southern master and the revengeful white trash characters, disenchanted “twilight Westerns” announce the ideological challenge that marked the Westerns of the 1960s and 1970s. The premonitory intuition of these films constitutes the red thread of the present article.
topic American cinema
melodrama
South
Southern
Western
url http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9239
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