Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 352
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4422-3087-3 • Hardback • March 2014 • $84.00 • (£65.00)
978-1-4422-3088-0 • eBook • March 2014 • $79.50 • (£61.00)
Mark Osteen is chair of the English Department and cofounder of the Film Studies Program at Loyola University Maryland. He has published dozens of articles on film, music, and modern literature and is the author or editor of ten books, including One of Us: A Family’s Life with Autism (2010) and Nightmare Alley: Film Noir and the American Dream (2013).
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Hitchcock and Adaptation, Mark Osteen
I: Hitchcock and Authorship
Chapter 1: Hitchcock the Author, Thomas M. Leitch
Chapter 2: Wrong Men on the Run: The 39 Steps as Hitchcock’s Espionage Paradigm, Walter Raubicheck and Walter Srebnick
Chapter 3: The Role and Presence of Authorship in Suspicion, Patrick Faubert
II. Hitchcock Adapting
Chapter 4: Melancholy Elephants: Hitchcock and Ingenious Adaptation, Ken Mogg
Chapter 5: Conrad’s The Secret Agent, Hitchcock’s Sabotage, and The Inspiration of “Public Uneasiness,” Matthew Paul Carlson
Chapter 6: Stranger(s) Than Fiction: Adaptation, Modernity, and the Menace of Fan Culture in Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train, Leslie H. Abramson
Chapter 7: Reading Hitchcock/Reading Queer: Adaptation, Narrativity, and a Queer Mode of Address in Rope, Strangers on a Train, and Psycho, Heath A. Diehl
Chapter 8: “Dear Miss Lonelyhearts”: Voyeurism and the Spectacle of Human Suffering in Rear Window, Nicholas Andrew Miller
Chapter 9: “The Proper Geography”: Hitchcock’s Adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s “The Birds,” John Bruns
Chapter 10: From Kaleidoscope to Frenzy: Hitchcock’s Second British Homecoming, Tony Williams
III. Hitching a Ride: The Collaborations
Chapter 11: Hitchcock’s Diegetic Imagination: Thornton Wilder, Shadow of a Doubt, and Hitchcock’s Mise-en-Scène, Donna Kornhaber
Chapter 12: “The Name of Hitchcock! The Fame of Steinbeck!”—The Legacy of Lifeboat, Maria A. Judnick
Chapter 13: “What did Alma Think?”:Continuity, Writing, Editing, and Adaptation, Christina Lane and Jo Botting
IV. Adapting Hitchcock
Chapter 14: The Second Look, the Second Death: W. G. Sebald’s Orphic Adaptation of Hitchcock’s Vertigo, Russell J. A. Kilbourn
Chapter 15: Dark Adaptations: Robert Bloch and Hitchcock on the Small Screen, Dennis R. Perry and Carl H. Sederholm
Chapter 16: Extraordinary Renditions: DeLillo’s Point Omega and Hitchcock’s Psycho, Mark Osteen
Chapter 17: The Culture of Spectacle in American Psycho, David Seed
Alfred Hitchcock Filmography
About the Contributors
About the Editor
Osteen’s collection should certainly interest the Hitchcock scholar (and anyone else that enjoys scholarly essays on film). Casual fans will also find a lot of interesting information. . . .A large percentage of the essays focus on Hitchcock’s film work, and it is here that the book blossoms into life. The essays offer many factual details to support the scholarly analysis, which makes the sometimes overreaching conclusions more digestible to the average reader. These factual details are what will interest many of the director’s fans. . . .If any of this sounds appealing, this book should be worth picking up.
— HitchcockMaster
In Hitchcock & Adaptation: On the Page and Screen, Mark Osteen has curated a number of essays that open up this crucial piece of Hitchcock’s directorial methodology and detail his creative approach that inspired his film masterpieces. . . . Readers of this compilation are in for a captivating read concerning the enduring thematic and stylistic relevancy of Hitchcock (conceptually speaking, not the Hitchcock) in adaptation film study today. . . .To put it simply, Osteen’s collection of essays is incredibly valuable to film and literary scholars as the collection covers a great deal of Hitchcock’s cinematic history in a manner that uncovers the complex relationship between Hitchcock and adaptation.
— Film Matters