1930年代荷兰电影市场发展受限的解释

Explanations for the Restrained Development of the Dutch Cinema Market in the 1930s

Enterprise and Society · 2012
被引 15 · 同刊同年前 6%
ABS 3

中文导读

通过新数据集对比荷兰与英语国家的电影消费,发现荷兰观影强度较低,原因在于宗教意识形态分层和行业卡特尔对价格与影院建设的限制。

Abstract

Cinemagoing in the Netherlands during the 1930s appears to have been much less intense than in the English-speaking world. To support this assertion we examine film attendance and diffusion in the Dutch market by recourse to a new large dataset, and contrast it with observations drawn from recent research on the Anglo-Saxon countries (United States, United Kingdom, and Australia). In setting down the economic principles behind the organisation of the film industry that best describe the Anglo-Saxon model, we show how the Dutch experience differed in scale, but not in type. To investigate the reasons for this, we examine the idea that film consumption in the Netherlands was constrained through the operation of informal institutional pressures. In particular, we investigate the influence that the vertical stratification of Dutch society into distinct religious and ideological strands may have had on the filmgoing appetites of the Dutch people. A further investigation looks at the combination of exhibitors and distributors into a single industry cartel and its impact upon prices and cinema building. The paper concludes that a complex mixture of cultural, economic, institutional, and social factors were at play, causing the Dutch people to be an outlier as far as film provision and consumption was concerned.

电影产业经济史文化社会学制度经济学