Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982

This thesis is an empirical analysis of Jane Fonda’s films, stardom, and political activism during the most commercially successful period of her career. At the outset, Fonda’s early stardom is situated in relation to contemporaneous moral and political ideologies in the United States and how she fu...

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Main Author: Rafferty, James Michael
Published: Queen Mary, University of London 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.528912
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5289122019-02-27T03:23:07ZPoliticising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982Rafferty, James Michael2010This thesis is an empirical analysis of Jane Fonda’s films, stardom, and political activism during the most commercially successful period of her career. At the outset, Fonda’s early stardom is situated in relation to contemporaneous moral and political ideologies in the United States and how she functioned as both an agent and symbol of these ideologies. Her anti-war activism in the early-1970s constituted the apex of Fonda’s radicalisation and the nadir of her popular appeal; a central question of this thesis, therefore, is how her stardom was rehabilitated for the American mainstream to the point of becoming Hollywood’s most bankable actress. As the star and producer of IPC Films, Fonda developed political projects using commercial formats, namely Coming Home (1978), The China Syndrome (1979), Nine to Five (1980), and Rollover (1981). The final IPC film, On Golden Pond (1981), signalled an ideological breach in this political strategy by favouring a familial spectacle, and duly outperformed its predecessors significantly. The first and last chapters of this work provide historical parameters for IPC in Fonda’s career, while the remaining chapters are structured by the conceptual and political aspects of each IPC project. Julia (1977) is discussed as an IPC prototype through its dramatisation of political consciousness. Coming Home, The China Syndrome, Nine to Five, and Rollover all exhibit this motif whereas On Golden Pond employs melodramatic nostalgia. Often discussed reductively as a star symbolising change, this thesis instead uses archival and published sources to analyse Fonda’s individual agency in historical context, as well as the cultural and political impact of her stardom. The IPC enterprise provided cinematic apparatus for Fonda’s political recuperation within the American mainstream, which, more broadly, harboured significance for the nation’s conservative resurgence at the end of the 1970s.791.43HistoryQueen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.528912http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/675Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 791.43
History
spellingShingle 791.43
History
Rafferty, James Michael
Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
description This thesis is an empirical analysis of Jane Fonda’s films, stardom, and political activism during the most commercially successful period of her career. At the outset, Fonda’s early stardom is situated in relation to contemporaneous moral and political ideologies in the United States and how she functioned as both an agent and symbol of these ideologies. Her anti-war activism in the early-1970s constituted the apex of Fonda’s radicalisation and the nadir of her popular appeal; a central question of this thesis, therefore, is how her stardom was rehabilitated for the American mainstream to the point of becoming Hollywood’s most bankable actress. As the star and producer of IPC Films, Fonda developed political projects using commercial formats, namely Coming Home (1978), The China Syndrome (1979), Nine to Five (1980), and Rollover (1981). The final IPC film, On Golden Pond (1981), signalled an ideological breach in this political strategy by favouring a familial spectacle, and duly outperformed its predecessors significantly. The first and last chapters of this work provide historical parameters for IPC in Fonda’s career, while the remaining chapters are structured by the conceptual and political aspects of each IPC project. Julia (1977) is discussed as an IPC prototype through its dramatisation of political consciousness. Coming Home, The China Syndrome, Nine to Five, and Rollover all exhibit this motif whereas On Golden Pond employs melodramatic nostalgia. Often discussed reductively as a star symbolising change, this thesis instead uses archival and published sources to analyse Fonda’s individual agency in historical context, as well as the cultural and political impact of her stardom. The IPC enterprise provided cinematic apparatus for Fonda’s political recuperation within the American mainstream, which, more broadly, harboured significance for the nation’s conservative resurgence at the end of the 1970s.
author Rafferty, James Michael
author_facet Rafferty, James Michael
author_sort Rafferty, James Michael
title Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
title_short Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
title_full Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
title_fullStr Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
title_full_unstemmed Politicising stardom : Jane Fonda, IPC Films and Hollywood, 1977-1982
title_sort politicising stardom : jane fonda, ipc films and hollywood, 1977-1982
publisher Queen Mary, University of London
publishDate 2010
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.528912
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