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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Gordon and Grimm Abstract

Although the most significant role in the early years of motion picture production was undoubtedly that of the camera operator, there is relatively little known about the people who performed this job during cinema’s silent era. The development of the fledgling motion picture business relied almost entirely on the technological and aesthetic advancements involved in capturing moving images, and much of the credit for these advancements can be attributed to the camera operators themselves who often functioned as roving inventors, photographers, technicians, and directors simultaneously. What follows draws on a decade of research into the men and women who operated cameras during this era compiled from trade journals, newspaper reports, census records, and other fragments of archival evidence about the lives and careers of some of these individuals. It is, no doubt, imperfect and incomplete—but we hope that is a useful starting point for further research in this area.

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