We can better understand Henry Green’s underappreciated late modernist comedy Party Going (1939) by acknowledging its debt to the conventions of classical Hollywood cinema. This essay argues specifically that Green’s narrative refracts the abrupt shifts in scene and perspective that constitute shot/reverse shot editing, a staple of 1930s narrative film. By situating Party Going in relation to Edmund Gréville’s British film Brief Ecstasy (1937), the essay demonstrates how Green appropriates the narrow frame of shot/reverse shot—canonically used as a means of depicting two characters in conversation—and widens the frame to engage a greatly enlarged visual universe. This widening makes possible a more expansive set of perspectives, providing what the essay terms dynamic viewpoint. Through this technique, Green orchestrates a narrative of unstable perspectives and ambiguous meanings, simultaneously commenting on the precarities of British life in the politically and socially fraught 1930s and establishing a critical distance from the Hollywood films whose visual language he both appropriates and reformulates for his own distinct purposes.
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March 01 2025
Pair and Panorama: Henry Green’s Cinematic Modernism Available to Purchase
Stephen Read Hager
Stephen Read Hager teaches and writes about modern and contemporary British, American, and global Anglophone literature, drawing especially on film and media studies, and on narrative theory and visual culture. He is currently a doctoral candidate in English at the University of Virginia, where he is completing his dissertation, “Cinematic Modernism: Sociality, Space, and The Externalization of Subjectivity, 1930–1946.”
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Twentieth-Century Literature (2025) 71 (1): 1–28.
Citation
Stephen Read Hager; Pair and Panorama: Henry Green’s Cinematic Modernism. Twentieth-Century Literature 1 March 2025; 71 (1): 1–28. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/0041462X-11686142
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