| Before the Nickelodeon |
| Foreword |
| Acknowledgments |
| 1 Introduction |
| • | Modes of Production and Representation |
| • | Subject Matter and Ideology |
| • | Commercial Methods |
| 2 Porter's Early Years. 1870-1896 |
| • | The Porter Family |
| • | Porter and Connellsville's Cultural Life |
| • | Porter and Technological Innovation |
| 3 Edison and the Kinetoscope: 1888-1895 |
| • | Preparations |
| • | Initial Film Production |
| • | Exploitation of the Kinetoscope |
| • | Continued Film Production |
| 4 Cinema, a Screen Novelty: 1895-1897 |
| • | The Vitaseope's Premiere |
| • | Producing Films for the Vitascope |
| • | The Vitascope Group |
| • | The Connellsville Entrepreneurs Acquire States Rights |
| • | Rival Novelties: the San Francisco Opening of the Vitascope |
| • | Porter Joins His Connellsville Friends in Los Angeles |
| • | The Vitascope Faces Increasing Difficulties |
| • | Indiana |
| • | The Vitascope Company in Disarray |
| • | The Edison Manufacturing Company Breaks Away from Raft & Gammon |
| • | Edwin Porter, Itinerant Exhibitor |
| 5 Producer and Exhibitor as Co-Creators: 1897-1900 |
| • | The Peripatetic James White and Edison Film Production |
| • | Edison On the Legal Offensive |
| • | The Eden Musee |
| • | Porter Operates and Builds Projectors |
| • | The Eden Musee Moves Into Production—The Passion Play |
| • | The Spanish-American War |
| • | Porter and the Eden Musee After the War |
| • | The Edison Manufacturing Company and Its Licensees |
| • | James White and the Kinetograph Department |
| • | The Edison Manufacturing Company Reaches its Commercial Nadir |
| 6 The Production Company Assumes Greater Control: 1900-1902 |
| • | Porter Becomes an Edison Employee |
| • | The Cinema as a Visual Newspaper |
| • | Editorial Strategies |
| • | Spring 1901 |
| • | Edison Attains a Virtual Monopoly |
| • | Mckinley Pictures |
| • | Edison's Conservative Business Strategy |
| • | Defeated in the Courts, Edison Faces Renewed Competition |
| • | "Telling a Story in Continuity Form" |
| 7 A Close Look at Life of an American Fireman: 1902-1903 |
| • | Representational Practices in Life of an American Fireman |
| • | Life of an American Fireman in Film History |
| 8 Story Films Become the Dominant Product: 1903-1904 |
| • | Disruptions |
| • | Production Resumes at Edison |
| • | Uncle Tom's Cabin |
| • | Summer Fun |
| • | The Great Train Robbery |
| • | The Chase |
| • | The Railway Subgenre: Spectator as Passenger |
| • | Another Change in Personnel |
| • | The Russo-Japanese War |
| • | Dupes, Remakes, Copycatting, and Cheap Productions |
| • | The French Threat: Pathé Enters the American Market |
| • | George Kleine and the Edison Company Go Separate Ways |
| • | Edison Versus Biograph: the Remaking of Personal |
| • | The Legacy of Exhibitor-Dominated Cinema |
| • | Parsifal |
| 9 Articulating an Old-Middle-Class Ideology: 1904-1905 |
| • | American Themes and Values: Family and Society |
| • | The Country and the City |
| • | Society and Its Outcasts |
| • | The Edison Comedies |
| • | Actualities and Short Subjects |
| 10 Elaborating on the Established Mode of Representation: 1905-1907 |
| • | A Transformation in the Realm of Exhibition |
| • | Edison Benefits from the Nickelodeon Craze |
| • | Production Practices at Edison |
| • | The Issue of Narrative Clarity—Audience Familiarity |
| • | Self-Sufficient Narratives and Intratextual Redundancy |
| • | Complex Narratives |
| • | Robert K. Bonine and the Production of Actualities: 1906-1907 |
| 11 As Cinema Becomes Mass Entertainment, Porter Resists: 1907-1908 |
| • | The End of the Nickelodeon Frontier |
| • | The Formation of the Association of Edison Licensees and the Film Service Association |
| • | The Biograph Association of Licensees |
| • | The Edison Manufacturing Company Opens Its Bronx Studio |
| • | Narrative Clarity: 1907-1909 |
| • | The Lecture |
| • | "Talking Pictures" |
| • | Intertitles |
| • | A Rigorous Linear Temporality |
| • | Edison Features: 1907-1908 |
| • | The Kinetograph Department Forms Two Production Units |
| • | Cinema and Society |
| 12 Edison Lets Porter Go: 1908-1909 |
| • | Edison and Biograph Begin To Negotiate |
| • | Motion Picture Patents Company Agreements |
| • | Commercial Warfare Within a New Framework |
| • | The Porter/Edison Films in Disfavor |
| • | Porter Is Demoted |
| 13 Postscript |
| • | Edison Filmmaking Revives |
| • | Edwin S. Porter and the Formation of Famous Players |
| • | Edison's Motion Picture Business Comes To a Close |
| • | Conclusion |
| Appendix A Edison Manufacturing Company Statements of Profit and Loss: 1893-1911 |
| Appendix B Kleine Optical Company Accounts |
| Appendix C Credits and Key To Quotations in the Documentary Film Before the Nickelodeon: the Early Cinema of Edwin S. Porter |
| Notes |
| • | Acknowledgments |
| • | 1 Introduction |
| • | 2 Porter's Early Years. 1870-1896 |
| • | 3 Edison and the Kinetoscope: 1888-1895 |
| • | 4 Cinema, a Screen Novelty: 1895-1897 |
| • | 5 Producer and Exhibitor as Co-Creators: 1897-1900 |
| • | 6 The Production Company Assumes Greater Control: 1900-1902 |
| • | 7 A Close Look at Life of an American Fireman: 1902-1903 |
| • | 8 Story Films Become the Dominant Product: 1903-1904 |
| • | 9 Articulating an Old-Middle-Class Ideology: 1904-1905 |
| • | 10 Elaborating on the Established Mode of Representation: 1905-1907 |
| • | 11 As Cinema Becomes Mass Entertainment, Porter Resists: 1907-1908 |
| • | 12 Edison Lets Porter Go: 1908-1909 |
| • | 13 Postscript |
| List of Abbreviations and Primary Sources |
| Credits for Illustrations |
| Subject and Name Index |
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| Film Title Index |
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