
Ghettos, Tramps, and Welfare Queens: Down & Out on the Silver Screen explores how American movies have portrayed poor and homeless people from the silent era to today. It provides a novel kind of guide to social policy, exploring how ideas about poor and homeless people have been reflected in popular culture and evaluating those images against the historical and contemporary reality. Richly illustrated and examining nearly 300 American-made films released between 1902 and 2015, Ghettos, Tramps, and Welfare Queens finds and describes representations of poor and homeless people and the places they have inhabited throughout the century-long history of U.S. cinema. It moves beyond the merely descriptive to deliberate whether cinematic representations of homelessness and poverty changed over time, and if there are patterns to be discerned. Ultimately, the text offers a preliminary response to a handful of harder questions about causation and consequence: Why are these portrayals as they are? Where do they come from? Are they a reflection of American attitudes and policies toward marginalized populations, or do they help create them? What does this all mean for politics and policymaking? Of interest to movie buffs and film scholars, cultural critics and historians, policy analysts, and those curious to know more about homelessness and American poverty, Ghettos, Tramps, and Welfare Queens is a unique window into American politics, history, policy, and culture -- it is an entertaining and enlightening journey.
This book investigates how American cinema has constructed and perpetuated specific narratives regarding poverty and homelessness from the silent era through the early 21st century. Stephen Pimpare, a scholar of social policy, utilizes a vast archive of nearly 300 films to analyze the intersection of popular culture and political reality. He argues that these cinematic portrayals are not merely passive reflections of society but active agents in shaping public attitudes and legislative approaches toward marginalized populations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of media studies and social welfare policy. Readers frequently note the accessibility of the prose despite the academic rigor applied to the historical analysis.
Page Count:
373
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190660740
ISBN-13:
9780190660741
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