,
Tweet to @corkup
 
Sign up to our newsletter here to receive a 20% discount off any order.





Shop by Price
Free Shipping
featured products
products

  Home > Series > Ireland into Film >

December Bride
December Bride


 
Our Price:10.00
Authors: Lance Pettitt
Affiliation: Principal Lecturer in Media and Popular Studies at Leeds Metropolitan University
Publication Year: Softback 2001
Pages: 94
Size: 190 x 135mm

ISBN: 9781859182901
Qty:

Description
 

An incisive new series designed to increase critical understanding of 'Irish' film. Ireland into Film invites writers and scholars from the fields of film and literary studies to examine notable adaptations of Irish literary texts.

Sam Hanna Bell's debut novel (1951), about life in a tight-knit Presbyterian community in turn-of-the-century Northern Ireland, was adapted for the screen by David Rudkin and directed by Thaddeus O'Sullivan in 1990. Both as a novel and as a film, December Bride is a remarkable combination of passion and politics set against a rural backdrop of communal constraint and individual action. Visually and thematically, the film is a timely reinvestigation of Ulster Protestant history and culture,and in particular reclaims a tradition of radical independent thought exemplified by the work of Sam Hanna Bell. Drawing on previously unpublished archival material and new interviews, Lance Pettitt explores the intricate relationship between novel,screenplay and the wider film culture. December Bride is a consummate and provocative challenge to the politics of Irish society, its cinematic representations, and to the very process of film adaptation itself.


Share your knowledge of this product. Be the first to write a review »
 
Copyright ©  Cork University Press. All Rights Reserved.Built with Volusion
Please subscribe to our Newsletter to enjoy 20% discounts on future orders