[On June
1st, 1980, the Cable News Network (CNN) aired its first
broadcast. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy cable news and four other
significant evolutions in American mass media, leading up to a special post on
one of the best
scholarly studies of media and the Revolution!]
On an iconic
film series that helps us analyze an under-remembered, hugely influential media
genre.
Like any good
AmericanStudier (and American historical fiction fan), my strongest association
with the film medium known as the newsreel is John
Dos Passos’ literary creation of newsreels as one of the key structural
sections in his U.S.A. (1938) trilogy of historical novels. Well, some good AmericanStudiers
might highlight instead the fictional newsreel about Charles
Foster Kane that helps provide exposition in Orson Welles’ groundbreaking film
Citizen Kane (1941). In truth, by
the time both of those cultural representations were created, newsreels had
been around for decades (the medium was invented by French filmmaker Charles Pathé
in 1911) and had provided video footage for much of world history over that
time. Indeed, it’s my understanding that a great deal of the most familiar
video footage from the 1910s through at least the 1930s (such as the famous
video of the 1937
Hindenburg disaster) was produced for newsreel films and series. It’s fair
to say that you can’t tell the story of mass media in the early 20th
century without including newsreels in a prominent place—but also that (at
least in my experience) newsreels don’t tend to receive the attention that
radio and early feature films do in our collective memories of the period. (As
I was drafting this post, I learned about a newly published scholarly book, Joseph
Clark’s News Parade: The American
Newsreel and the World as Spectacle, that will hopefully help change
that trend.)
One of the
longest-running and most influential newsreels was The March of Time (1935-1951).
March was originally created in 1931
as a radio news
documentary and dramatization series to complement Time magazine; for more on that radio program, which ran through
1945, see Cynthia
Meyers’ award-winning 2018
American Journalism article. On
February 1st, 1935, a film version of March debuted in 500 theaters across the country, narrated (as were
the radio broadcasts) by iconic broadcaster Westbrook Van Voorhis; every
month for the next 16 years saw the release of a new short film in the series.
The March films were up to twice as
long (each was either 20 or 30 minutes in length) as standard newsreels, so
perhaps it is more accurate to call them short films; but while there is
certainly value in delineating different sub-genres within a particular form,
I’d say that the difference is roughly synonymous to that of a novella vs. a
novel. Both the latter are works of fiction, with a difference mainly of length
(and without much distinction when it comes to the reading experience);
similarly, shorter vs. longer newsreels seem to me to operate within the same
overarching category and with the same main purposes and effects. And since March was one of the longest-running
newsreels, linking it to that category (as the Academy Awards did in 1937,
giving March an honorary Oscar “for
its significance to motion pictures and for having revolutionized one of the
most important branches of the industry—the newsreel”) can help us better
remember and analyze the form overall.
March covered at least 3-4 (and often
5-6) distinct topics in each short film, as illustrated by the episode guide
compiled on its
Wikipedia page. But one element that seems to have cut across most of those
segments and episodes is an editorial perspective, a specific, clearly
expressed point of view on the subject at hand (rather than an attempt at
objectivity, complex and fraught as that concept always is). One of the most
famous such perspectives was featured in the first segment of the series’
second film, which debuted on March
8th, 1935; that segment focused on Adolf Hitler’s rise to power
in Germany, and used the term “fascism” to describe (accurately, but
controversially in 1935) him and his regime. What that segment reveals is (it
seems to me) a broader truth about the genre: that newsreels like the March series are not simply primary
sources to help us recover stories and histories (although each of them is unquestionably
a treasure trove of such materials); they also can help us understand how
history unfolded, how events were influenced and shaped by the voices and
narratives that engaged (and in at least some ways constructed) them. Obviously
the March of Time was not responsible
for Hitler and Nazi Germany; but its depiction helps us think about how different
media responded to those forces, how audiences engaged those stories, and thus gives
us a chance to better understand the world in which Hitler and Germany (and so
many other 1930s and 40s events) took place.
Last mass media
post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other mass media moments or movements you’d highlight?
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