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The contributors to this volume negotiate the notion of a classic in film and fiction, exploring the growing interface and the blurring of boundaries between literature and film. Taking the problematic term classic as its focus, the contributors consider both canonical literary and film texts, questioning whether classic status in one domain transfer it to another. The book looks at a wide range of texts and their adaptations. Authors discussed are Shakespeare, Charlotte Bronte, Henry James, Franz Kafka, Thomas Mann, Virginia Woolf, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Arthur Miller, Truman Capote, and Lewis Carroll. Book to film adaptations, analysed including a comparison of Joyce’s Ulysses with Hitchcock’s Rear Window ,. Throughout, the contributors challenge the dichotomy between high culture and pop culture.
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The contributors to this volume negotiate the notion of a classic in film and fiction, exploring the growing interface and the blurring of boundaries between literature and film. Taking the problematic term classic as its focus, the contributors consider both canonical literary and film texts, questioning whether classic status in one domain transfer it to another. The book looks at a wide range of texts and their adaptations. Authors discussed are Shakespeare, Charlotte Bronte, Henry James, Franz Kafka, Thomas Mann, Virginia Woolf, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Arthur Miller, Truman Capote, and Lewis Carroll. Book to film adaptations, analysed including a comparison of Joyce’s Ulysses with Hitchcock’s Rear Window ,. Throughout, the contributors challenge the dichotomy between high culture and pop culture.