Notes on Contributors x
Introduction 1
Thomas Leitch and Leland Poague
Part I Background 9
1. Hitchcock’s Lives 11
Thomas Leitch
2. Hitchcock’s Literary Sources 28
Ken Mogg
3. Hitchcock and Early Filmmakers 48
Charles Barr
4. Hitchcock’s Narrative Modernism: Ironies of Fictional Time
67
Thomas Hemmeter
Part II Genre 87
5. Hitchcock and Romance 89
Lesley Brill
6. Family Plots: Hitchcock and Melodrama 109
Richard R. Ness
7. Conceptual Suspense in Hitchcock’s Films 126
Paula Marantz Cohen
Part III Collaboration 139
8. “Tell Me the Story So Far”: Hitchcock and His Writers 141
Leland Poague
9. Suspicion: Collusion and Resistance in the Work of Hitchcock’s
Female Collaborators 162
Tania Modleski
10. A Surface Collaboration: Hitchcock and Performance 181
Susan White
Part IV Style 199
11. Aesthetic Space in Hitchcock 201
Brigitte Peucker
12. Hitchcock and Music 219
Jack Sullivan
13. Some Hitchcockian Shots 237
Murray Pomerance
Part V Development 253
14. Hitchcock’s Silent Cinema 255
Sidney Gottlieb
15. Gaumont Hitchcock 270
Tom Ryall
16. Hitchcock Discovers America: The Selznick-Era Films 289
Ina Rae Hark
17. From Transatlantic to Warner Bros. 309
David Sterritt
18. Hitchcock, Metteur-en-scène: 1954–60 329
Joe McElhaney
19. The Universal Hitchcock 347
William Rothman
Part VI Auteurism 365
20. French Hitchcock, 1945–55 367
James M. Vest
21. Lost in Translation? Listening to the Hitchcock–Truffaut
Interview 387
Janet Bergstrom
22. Robin Wood’s Hitchcock 405
Harry Oldmeadow
Part VII Ideology 425
23. Accidental Heroes and Gifted Amateurs: Hitchcock and Ideology
427
Toby Miller with Noel King
24. Hitchcock and Feminist Criticism:
From Rebecca to Marnie 452
Florence Jacobowitz
25. Queer Hitchcock 473
Alexander Doty
Part VIII Ethics 491
26. Hitchcock and Philosophy 493
Richard Gilmore
27. Hitchcock’s Ethics of Suspense: Psychoanalysis and the
Devaluation of the Object 508
Todd McGowan
28. Occasions of Sin: The Forgotten Cigarette Lighter and Other
Moral Accidents in Hitchcock 529
George Toles
Part IX Beyond Hitchcock 553
29. Hitchcock and the Postmodern 555
Angelo Restivo
30. Hitchcock’s Legacy 572
Richard Allen
Index 592
Thomas Leitch is Professor of English at the University ofDelaware, where he directs the Film Studies Program. His booksinclude Find the Director and Other Hitchcock Games (1991), The Encyclopedia of Alfred Hitchcock (2002), and, mostrecently, Film Adaptation and Its Discontents: From Gonewith the Wind to The Passion of the Christ (2007). Leland Poague is Professor of English at Iowa StateUniversity. With Marshall Deutelbaum, he edited AHitchcock Reader (1986, 2009). His other books includeAnother Frank Capra (1994), Howard Hawks (1982), and,with William Cadbury, Film Criticism: A Counter Theory(1982).
In summation, A Companion to Hitchcock will be requiredreading for anyone with more than a passing interest in thisdirector s films." (Cercles, 1 September2014) Teachers and students alike will find much to keepthemselves busy in A Companion to Alfred Hitchcock... atleast until the next heavy-duty study of his workarrives. (Psychobabble200, 20 March 2014)"A great resource for students of Hitchcock's films, craft,thought, influences, and aesthetics. Summing Up: Highlyrecommended. Lower-and upper-division undergraduates, graduatestudents, researchers, faculty." (Choice, 1 November 2011)
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