Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925

This dissertation explores the development of commercial entertainments and film exhibition in the urban South around the turn of the last century through the growth and decline of Jake Wells Enterprises. A former professional baseball player, Wells invested in a wide variety of public amusements, w...

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Main Author: Dewberry, Eric
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/24
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1024&context=communication_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-communication_diss-10242013-04-23T03:18:15Z Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925 Dewberry, Eric This dissertation explores the development of commercial entertainments and film exhibition in the urban South around the turn of the last century through the growth and decline of Jake Wells Enterprises. A former professional baseball player, Wells invested in a wide variety of public amusements, with the core of his early business centered on establishing and organizing a string of vaudeville, popularly priced, and legitimate theaters throughout the largest cities in the region, a network he later transitioned to showing exclusively motion pictures. A thorough analysis of period newspapers, trade journals, and some business records covering Wells’ career provides much-needed evidence for film and cultural historians wishing to understand the genesis and evolution of public amusements in the region, and its negotiation of traditional social and cultural institutions. In the 1890s, Wells played and managed several professional baseball teams in the South. The sport educated players and spectators alike to both the values and creed of New South progress, and to rising tensions confronting the intersection of modern and traditional forms of culture. Using his experiences and contacts gained in baseball, Wells helped foster a culture of entrepreneurship and innovation required for the progress of media industries in the region, establishing social networks of knowledge and improving distribution flows of entertainment. The dissertation explores how race and the genteel emerged as regional characteristics most influential to the success of this conversion in many urban areas. Protestants and evangelical culture served as the bulkhead supporting opposition to new amusements. Wells’ expansion plans and violations of Sabbath day laws evoked a “spatial” battle between commercialism and religion where political, social, and cultural power drawn from place and identity were challenged and reconfigured. Another chapter explores the exhibition and reception of early Civil War films in the region. Wells and other exhibitors were influential in their production and circulation nationwide, and positioned cinema as an alternative shrine to commemorate the Lost Cause in many communities. The last chapter shows how Wells failed to meet local demands and consumer desires in competition with the rise of national chain theaters and Hollywood’s vertical integration. 2010-11-04 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/24 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1024&context=communication_diss Communication Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU Jake Wells Cinema History Vaudeville Baseball Popular Culture Communication
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Jake Wells
Cinema History
Vaudeville
Baseball
Popular Culture
Communication
spellingShingle Jake Wells
Cinema History
Vaudeville
Baseball
Popular Culture
Communication
Dewberry, Eric
Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
description This dissertation explores the development of commercial entertainments and film exhibition in the urban South around the turn of the last century through the growth and decline of Jake Wells Enterprises. A former professional baseball player, Wells invested in a wide variety of public amusements, with the core of his early business centered on establishing and organizing a string of vaudeville, popularly priced, and legitimate theaters throughout the largest cities in the region, a network he later transitioned to showing exclusively motion pictures. A thorough analysis of period newspapers, trade journals, and some business records covering Wells’ career provides much-needed evidence for film and cultural historians wishing to understand the genesis and evolution of public amusements in the region, and its negotiation of traditional social and cultural institutions. In the 1890s, Wells played and managed several professional baseball teams in the South. The sport educated players and spectators alike to both the values and creed of New South progress, and to rising tensions confronting the intersection of modern and traditional forms of culture. Using his experiences and contacts gained in baseball, Wells helped foster a culture of entrepreneurship and innovation required for the progress of media industries in the region, establishing social networks of knowledge and improving distribution flows of entertainment. The dissertation explores how race and the genteel emerged as regional characteristics most influential to the success of this conversion in many urban areas. Protestants and evangelical culture served as the bulkhead supporting opposition to new amusements. Wells’ expansion plans and violations of Sabbath day laws evoked a “spatial” battle between commercialism and religion where political, social, and cultural power drawn from place and identity were challenged and reconfigured. Another chapter explores the exhibition and reception of early Civil War films in the region. Wells and other exhibitors were influential in their production and circulation nationwide, and positioned cinema as an alternative shrine to commemorate the Lost Cause in many communities. The last chapter shows how Wells failed to meet local demands and consumer desires in competition with the rise of national chain theaters and Hollywood’s vertical integration.
author Dewberry, Eric
author_facet Dewberry, Eric
author_sort Dewberry, Eric
title Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
title_short Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
title_full Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
title_fullStr Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
title_full_unstemmed Jake Wells Enterprises and the Development of Urban Entertainments in the South, 1890-1925
title_sort jake wells enterprises and the development of urban entertainments in the south, 1890-1925
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2010
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/24
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1024&context=communication_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT dewberryeric jakewellsenterprisesandthedevelopmentofurbanentertainmentsinthesouth18901925
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