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A Thousand Screenplays : The French Imagination in a Time of Crisis

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In 1991, French public television held an amateur screenwriting contest.

When Sabine Chalvon-Demersay, a French sociologist, examined the roughly 1000 entries, she had hoped to analyze their differences.

What she found, however, surprised her. Although the entrants covered nearly every social demographic, their screenplays presented similar characters in similar situations confronting similar problems.

The time of crisis presented by the amateur writers was not one of war, famine, or disease - it was the millennial dilemma of representation.

In a world plagued by alienation, individualization, and a lack of mobility, how can members of a society combat their declining senses of self?

Although the contestants wrote about life in France, their concerns and struggles have a distinctly universal ring.

Chalvon-Demersay offers a clear, if still developing, photograph of the contemporary imagination.

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226100685 / 9780226100685
Hardback
01/05/1999
United States
208 pages
15 x 28 mm
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More