Edinburgh University Press
ReFocus
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and
About this book
The films of John Hughes (1950–2009) have enjoyed popular and critical success alike, from his first scripts in the early 1980s through to his celebrated work later in the decade and into the 1990s. While Hughes is best remembered for his stories about teenagers, such as Sixteen Candles (1984), The Breakfast Club (1985) and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986), almost all of his films deal with comical conflicts within everyday American families. He directed eight films and wrote over thirty in a career spanning a quarter of a century, and is fondly remembered for influencing American perceptions of – and appreciation for – the daily lives of (primarily) common citizens.
This wide-ranging collection examines the films of John Hughes from diverse angles, considering how he depicted young characters, how he revealed the humour of family life, and how his films subtly critiqued social issues such as class, race, gender, education and domestic relationships.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Figures and Tables
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Notes on Contributors
x -
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Film and Television Work by John Hughes
xiv -
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1 Introduction: Refocus on John Hughes
1 - PART I Hughes in the Industry
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Introduction
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2 John Hughes as Auteur: History, Hagiography, Historiography
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3 “Becoming John Hughes”: Regional Production, Hyphenate Filmmaking, and Independence within Hollywood
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4 Ferris Bueller vs. Parker Lewis: “Adapting” Ferris Bueller’s Day Off for Television
64 - PART II Reconsidering Youth
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79 -
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5 “Life moves pretty fast”: Mobility, Power, and Aesthetics in John Hughes’s Teen Films
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6 “When Cameron was in Egypt’s land”: The Queer Child of Neglect in John Hughes’s Films
102 -
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7 We Need to Talk About Kevin McCallister: John Hughes’s Careless Parents and Abandoned Children
118 - PART III Family and Fatherhood
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137 -
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8 Brand Name Vision: Props in the Films of John Hughes
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9 Domesticating the Comedian: Comic Performance, Narrative, and the Family in John Hughes’s 1980s Comedian Films
161 -
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10 Fatherhood and the Failures of Paternal Authority in the Films of John Hughes
179 - PART IV Contested Identities
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Introduction
197 -
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11 Bizarre Love Triangle: Frankensteinian Masculinities in Weird Science
202 -
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12 “You look good wearing my future:” Social Class and Individualism in the 1980s Teen Films of John Hughes
221 -
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13 The Unbearable Whiteness of Being in a John Hughes Movie
236 -
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Other Films and Television Shows Cited in this Collection
250 -
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Bibliography
255 -
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Index
267