
Contents
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Introduction and Methodology Introduction and Methodology
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Breadth of Films Seen Breadth of Films Seen
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Tastes in Non-Period Films: Summary Trends Tastes in Non-Period Films: Summary Trends
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Period Film Tastes: Introduction Period Film Tastes: Introduction
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British and Irish Period Films British and Irish Period Films
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European and Non-Anglophone Period Films European and Non-Anglophone Period Films
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Us, Australian and New Zealand Period Films Us, Australian and New Zealand Period Films
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Heritage Market Leaders? Merchant Ivory Productions Versus Jane Austen Heritage Market Leaders? Merchant Ivory Productions Versus Jane Austen
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Notes Notes
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5 Patterns of Film Taste: Period and Non-Period Films
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Published:June 2011
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Abstract
This chapter explores the specifics of Heritage Audience Survey respondents' tastes in films: both in general and with reference to period films. It looks at profoundly contrasting patterns between the Time Out and National Trust subsamples in terms of film familiarity, adventurousness of film viewing and film tastes. Notwithstanding their ostensibly ‘uncinematic’ characteristics, did some respondents enjoy heritage films in the context of popular cinema tastes, or as part of a more informed cinephilia by others? How many films (from lists presented in the questionnaire) they recalled seeing across both period and non-period films? The majority of listed films were placed into classificatory groups — not divulged to respondents — for the purpose of analysing film tastes. The chapter considers two final indicators of patterns of ‘heritage’ film taste: the numbers of films directed by James Ivory and seen by respondents and the numbers of listed benchmark 1980s to mid-1990s film and television adaptations from Jane Austen novels they had seen.
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