Rachael Low (6 July 1923 – 14 December 2014)[1] was a British film historian, best known as the author of the seven-volume The History of the British Film.[2][3]
The daughter of the cartoonist Sir David Low,[4] she gained her BSc in sociology and economics in 1944 from the London School of Economics,[4] and her doctorate from the University of London in 1949. She published, in seven volumes between 1948 and 1985, The History of the British Film; this examines, in exacting detail, film production in Britain from its origins in 1896 until 1939. She was awarded a Research Fellowship by Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge, to facilitate her work on the later volumes of the series.[5]
Film critic Matthew Sweet has criticised Low's "tyrannous influence" on the writings of subsequent film historians.[6]
^Low, Rachael (ed.) The History of British Film (Volume 1): The History of the British Film 1896–1906; ISBN978-0-415-67983-1 (2004; reprinted 6 July 2011).
^International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004. Europa Publications. 2013. p. 341. ISBN978-1-136-13764-8.
^ abRichards, Jeffrey. "Introduction" to Low's The History of British Film 1896–1906, London: Routledge, 1997 [1948], p. v
^Low, Rachael. The History of the British Film, Volume V: Documentary and Educational Films of the 1930s. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1979, p. vii