Abstract

This chapter examines the early history of cinema in relation to rural cultural development in upper Coos County, New Hampshire. Built on a remote landscape, the culture of Coos in the nineteenth century was one of stable property, settled community, and self-sufficiency. As the century turned, residents sought to sustain traditions while adapting to a modern regional economy that imported finished goods, while exporting staples, tourism, and, increasingly, youth. Cinema participated in these changes, producing new social and spatial networks that modernized cultural provisioning services to buffer population loss and stimulate fresh flows of people, ideas, and commerce. These networks mediated cinema’s relation to existing practices, regulating the timing, speed, and direction of cinema’s development as it was transformed around feature films and purpose-built movie venues.

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