A
Review by Alexander Dhoest
In this book, Annette Kuhn investigates
British cinema culture in the 1930s through ethnohistorical
research. She reconstructs the position of cinemagoing in everyday
life, relying mostly on interviews with viewers. Pleading for
inclusive analysis and triangulation, she also draws on traditional
historical sources and textual analysis of key films of the period.
Central to her account is the cinemagoing experience, exceeding the
act of film viewing and including the setting and the broader
connotations and feelings mobilised by filmgoing.
This is an important book, both for the
concrete research it presents, and as an intervention in the field
of film studies. To start with the latter, reception remains the
least developed aspect in film studies, where the film text keeps
its central position. The contrast with television studies is
striking, where reception is a key concern both in the longstanding
tradition of effects research, and in the alternative qualitative,
‘ethnographic’ tradition. Therefore, as a book mostly dedicated to
viewing processes, An Everyday Magic is a valuable addition
to film studies, all the more so because of its historical approach.
There are obvious practical reasons for the dearth of historical
reception research, both in film and television studies: sources
tend to be few, hard to track and mostly quantitative (box office
figures or ratings), while first-hand accounts of viewers are rare.
Retrospectively reconstructing actual viewing experiences, as Kuhn
does, is not only a cumbersome process, but also one fraught with
methodological complications. The intervention of the researcher in
constructing ‘data’, unavoidable in any audience research, becomes
almost overdetermining in ethnohistorical research. As there is no
viewing process to be witnessed, all that is left are memories to be
constructed for the sake of research. However, this isn’t
necessarily in insurmountable problem, as Annette Kuhn’s work
demonstrates.
Robert C. Allen (1990) distinguishes
four aspects in the historical study of film audiences: exhibition,
audience (size and constitution plus social meanings of
cinema-going), performance (social and sensory context of
reception), and activation (making sense). Discussing memories of
cinema interiors, Kuhn’s book partly intervenes in the third field,
which also stands central in other recent research such as that of
Jancovich and Faire (2003), investigating the concrete spatial
viewing context of film theatres. However, the most important
contribution of the book is situated on the fourth field, that of
sense making. Thus, Kuhn inscribes herself in a limited tradition of
historical reception research focussing on the use and
interpretation of films. One key work in this tradition is Janet
Staiger’s Interpreting films: Studies in the historical reception
of American cinema (1992). Describing her work as a ‘materialist
historiography of American cinema’, Staiger analysed the historical
discursive context of reception practices, mostly relying on
existing historical evidence such as reviews. Jackie Stacey’s
Star Gazing: Hollywood cinema and female spectatorship (1994)
made an important contribution to this field by conducting research
into actual viewing processes. Stacey envisioned her work as a
deliberate intervention in feminist film studies, with its
traditional focus on the textual spectator. She didn’t
straightforwardly reject the model of the implicit reader, but aimed
to reconcile it with the analysis of actual social readers.
Methodologically, she used letter’s responding to ads in women’s
magazines, followed up by a questionnaire addressing the themes
emerging from the letters.
As all methods in this field, letters
provide an indirect way into the past through retrospective
reconstruction. However, Stacey pleads not to consider the
unavoidable processes of representation as barriers to meaning, but
rather as the form of meaning. This is also very much Annette Kuhn’s
approach, which moves on from Stacey’s work and develops it on
important points. While her book less deeply engages with debates in
the field, Kuhn also very much works from a feminist agenda, in
particular by taking seriously the strong engagement with cinema by
‘silly’ female fans. In this respect, Kuhn’s book draws on the
cultural studies approach of media, focussing on the use of popular
culture by ‘ordinary’ users in everyday contexts. With Stacey, and
significantly within feminist film studies, she shares an interest
in the social audience rather than the spectator as constructed by
the text. Methodologically, Kuhn adds to this a deeper and more
direct engagement with viewers responses, through extended
interviews.
Theoretically, too, Kuhn develops the
ground laid out by Stacey by elaborating more deeply on the crucial
role of memory in the process of reconstructing the past. Drawing on
viewer memories, the historical narrative is strongly mediated
through representations. This may be unavoidable, but it is worth
reflecting on the discourses mobilized in the interviewing process.
Kuhn introduces the term ‘memory texts’ to describe the recorded
acts of remembering, where the past is produced in the activity of
remembering. Interviews don’t provide a ‘window on the past’, but
stories possible tainted by forgetting, selective memory and
hindsight. In recounting the past, informants are doing ‘memory
work’, staging and performing memories. All this confirms the view
that informants’ accounts are not simply data, but discourses to be
interpreted. In her interpretation, Kuhn searches for ‘tropes’, or
discursive registers, in the cinema memories of her informants. She
considers the interviews as stories - narratives but not fiction -
and studies their narrative organisation and themes. Her analysis
covers a variety of themes ranging from ‘scenes’ of cinema-going
(topographical memories of cinemas) and particular genres (horror,
musicals), to activities associated with cinema-going, such as
children’s play and adolescent’s courting.
Apart from the first, introductory
chapter, the book is very much organised around the interview
material. The chapter structure is based on themes emerging from the
interviews, and the text is richly illustrated with excerpts of
interview transcripts. Rather than moving on from preconceived
theoretical issues, Kuhn charts patterns in the viewer responses
which she then frames and interprets, taking care never to stray too
far from the respondents’ own experiences. The book strongly
respects the voice of ‘ordinary’ viewers, presenting a rich and
detailed description of cinemagoing experiences. As such, the
insights offered by the book are quite ‘local’, speaking primarily
to a readership interested in British cinema culture in the
thirties. However, as an engaging analysis of everyday cinema
culture and as an example of methodologically sound ethnohistorical
film research, it is also relevant to a broader readership.
This being said, one of the problems
with this kind of research - apart from the huge effort involved in
conducting and transcribing interviews - is in the presentation of
the material. Drawing on a wealth of individual responses, and
sharing the ethnographic and feminist respect for the voice of
common viewers, hesitating to overly textualise and theoretically
frame their responses, the account tends to become very concrete and
descriptive.[1]
While staying this close to the material certainly offers
advantages, such as a very good sense of the actual language and
categories used by viewers, there is the danger of myopic vision:
being too close to reality, offering all but a one on one map of
reality. Kuhn avoids this pitfall, as she adds a level of
abstraction by categorising and theorising. However, this book does
illustrate the difficult exercise researchers in this field are
faced with: remaining faithful to the material while also opening up
the account to wider cultural and societal dynamics. In this
respect, the inclusiveness and triangulation championed by Kuhn
could be further developed to add more layers to the reconstruction
of everyday cinema culture. The combination of detailed audience
memories with more elaborate research on texts as well as production
and cultural contexts would certainly make for an even more
enlightening account of cinema culture. However, as it is, An
everyday magic is a beautifully balanced work capturing the
combination of ordinariness yet extraordinariness of cinemagoing in
the thirties, and offering a challenging benchmark for further
investigations in the field.
Contact (by e-mail):
Alexander Dhoest
References
Allen, Robert C., ‘From exhibition to
reception: Reflections on the audience in film history’, Screen,
31 (4), 1990, pp. 347-356.
Jancovich, Mark & Lucy Faire with Sarah
Stubbings, The place of the audience: Cultural geographies of
film consumption, London: BFI, 2003.
Skeggs, Beverly, ‘Theorising, ethics and
representation in feminist ethnography’, in Beverly Skeggs (ed.),
Feminist cultural theory: Process and production, Manchester:
Manchester University Press 1995, pp. 190-206.
Stacey, Jackie, Star
gazing: Hollywood cinema and female spectatorship, London:
Routledge, 1994.
Staiger, Janet,
Interpreting films: Studies in the historical reception of American
cinema, Princeton: Princeton UP, 1992.
[1]
On the ethics of feminist ethnographic research, see Beverly
Skeggs 1995.
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