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Thursday, November 14, 2024
7:00 PM EST
Since the opening bout, the boxing film has served as perennial bellwether to contemporaneous cultural attitudes even amid the steep decline in the sport’s viewership. From the Great Migration, Victorian ethnic rivalries and immigration, post-war film noir, public fascination with criminals as they muscled into the sport and onto the big screen, the Hollywood blacklist and through to the #metoo era, the boxing films continue to capture the zeitgeist.
Larger-than-life Hollywood figures and directors share equal space with the advancement of film making, ethic rivalries in and out of the ring, the rise of “true crime,” and fighters who, in their day, enjoyed the same level of fame as the most important figures in politics and entertainment.
David Curcio is an artist and writer living in Salem, MA. His numerous art, film, and book reviews have been featured on websites and magazines including Bookslut, The Boston Art Review, and Turner Movie Classics’ Noir City. His essay, “Women and Children First! Second-Wave Feminism in the Work of John Wyndam” is included in the coffee table book, Dangerous Visions and New Worlds: Radical Science Fiction, 1950–1985. Smash Hit: Race, Crime, and Culture in Boxing Films is his first book.
Tickets: $15 Members | $20 Non-members
This is a hybrid event.
Salem Athenaeum participates in Card to Culture.
Salem Athenaeum
337 Essex St.
Salem, MA 01970
David Curcio—Smash Hit
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Salem Athenaeum
337 Essex St. Salem, MA
David Curcio—Smash Hit
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Salem Athenaeum
337 Essex St. Salem, MA