Black American Cinema

Front Cover
Manthia Diawara
Routledge, 2012 M10 2 - 336 pages

This is the first major collection of criticism on Black American cinema. From the pioneering work of Oscar Micheaux and Wallace Thurman to the Hollywood success of Spike Lee, Black American filmmakers have played a remarkable role in the development of the American film, both independent and mainstream.

In this volume, the work of early Black filmmakers is given serious attention for the first time. Individual essays consider what a Black film tradition might be, the relation between Black American filmmakers and filmmakers from the diaspora, the nature of Black film aesthetics, the artist's place within the community, and the representation of a Black imaginary. Black AmericanCinema also uncovers the construction of Black sexuality on screen, the role of Black women in independent cinema, and the specific question of Black female spectatorship. A lively and provocative group of essays debate the place and significance of Spike Lee

Of crucial importance are the ways in which the essays analyze those Black directors who worked for Hollywood and whose films are simplistically dismissed as sell-outs, to the Hollywood "master narrative," as well as those "crossover" filmmakers whose achievements entail a surreptitious infiltration of the studios. Black AmericanCinema demonstrates the wealth of the Black contribution to American film and the complex course that contribution has taken.

Contributors: Houston Baker, Jr., Toni Cade Bambara, Amiri Baraka, Jacquie Bobo, Richard Dyer, Jane Gaines, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Ron Green, Ed Guerrero, bell hooks, Phyllis Klotman, Ntongele Masilela, Clyde Taylor, and Michele Wallace.

 

Contents

The New Realism
3
Twoness in the Style of Oscar Micheaux
26
Race Melodrama and Oscar Micheaux
49
The Story Continues
71
The Case
80
Is Car Wash a Black Musical?
93
The Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers
107
Daughters of the Dust
118
Looking for Modernism
200
Black Spectatorship
211
Black Film Exhibition in Austin Texas
221
Hollywoods Biracial
237
Towards Normalizing
247
Lost
257
The Black Woman as Audience
272
Black Female Spectators
288

Spike Lee at the Movies
145
Spike Lee and the Commerce of Culture
154
The Ironies of PalaceSubaltern Discourse
177
Bibliography
303
List of Contributors
311
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About the author (2012)

Manthia Diawara is Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania.

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