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Film histories: An introduction and reader

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Abstract

The history of motion-pictures is not easily defined by a single invention or inaugural event. While inventors such as Thomas Edison, and early cinema pioneers such as the Lumiére brothers, have become central to legends surrounding the ‘birth of cinema’, the emergence of cinema was the result of a series of technological and entrepreneurial developments that came together in the 1890s. Seeking to capitalise on new capacities of photographic development, the invention of celluloid, and the refinement of machines that could project images in sequence, a number of individuals saw commercial possibilities in projecting moving images to paying audiences. Cinema did not arise as a fully fledged industry with a set of aesthetic norms and conventions in place, but developed as a novelty entertainment, one of a number of emergent visual forms within popular culture at the end of the nineteenth century.
Conference Paper
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