ABSTRACT

The contention of Film and the American Presidency is that over the twentieth century the cinema has been a silent partner in setting the parameters of what we might call the presidential imaginary. This volume surveys the partnership in its longevity, placing stress on especially iconic presidents such as Lincoln and FDR. The contributions to this collection probe the rich interactions between these high institutions of culture and politics—Hollywood and the presidency—and argue that not only did Hollywood acting become an idiom for presidential style, but that Hollywood early on understood its own identity through the presidency’s peculiar mix of national epic and unified protagonist. Additionally, they contend that studios often made their films to sway political outcomes; that the performance of presidential personae has been constrained by the kinds of bodies (for so long, white and male) that have occupied the office, such that presidential embodiment obscures the body politic; and that Hollywood and the presidency may finally be nothing more than two privileged figures of media-age power.

part I|80 pages

Early Cinema and the Classicalizing of the Presidential Image

chapter 2|20 pages

The Media Reconfigured

The US Presidential Elections of 1892 and 1896

chapter 3|16 pages

“So Typically Southern”

Abraham Lincoln, the New South, and the Romance of Reunion

chapter 4|17 pages

Mr. Lincoln by Mr. Ford and Mr. Griffith

Image and History in American Cinema

chapter 5|25 pages

Wilson and the War Effort

Film, Pedagogy, and the Presidency

part II|36 pages

FDR and the Mediated President

chapter 7|17 pages

The Vanishing President

part III|60 pages

Postclassical Presidents

chapter 8|20 pages

Clean Cuts

Kennedy Modernism on Screen

chapter 9|16 pages

LBJ and the Astronauts

chapter 10|22 pages

Richard Nixon and the Arts of Power

part IV|40 pages

Beyond the Reaganite Presidential Imaginary

chapter 11|16 pages

Angry Presidents

Hollywood Film and the Post-9/11 American Presidency

part V|34 pages

The Mise-en-Scene of the Presidency

chapter 14|16 pages

The Mysteries of Washington, D.C.

Hollywood's White House Tunnels

chapter |6 pages

Afterword