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Understanding McLuhan
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07104_Field_TCUM T669.txt
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1996-04-10
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Dickens that inspired movie pioneers like D. W. Griffith, who
carried a copy of a Dickens novel on location. The realistic
novel, that arose with the newspaper form of communal cross-
section and human-interest coverage in the eighteenth century,
was a complete anticipation of film form. Even the poets took
up the same panoramic style, with human interest vignettes
and close-ups as variant. Gray’s Elegy , Burns’ The Cotter’s
Saturday Night , Wordsworth’s Michael , and Byron’s Childe
Harold are all like shooting scripts for some contemporary
documentary film.
“The kettle began it. . . .” Such is the opening of Dickens’
Cricket and the Hearth . If the modern novel came out of Gogol’s
The Overcoat , the modern movie, says Eisenstein, boiled up out
of that kettle. It should be plain that the American and even
British approach to film is much lacking in that free interplay