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Returning the Gaze Anna Everett

Returning the Gaze By Anna Everett

Returning the Gaze by Anna Everett


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Summary

Revises American film history by recuperating the extensive and all-but-forgotten participation of black film critics during the early twentieth century. This work excavates a wealth of early critical writing on the cinema by black cultural critics, academics, journalists, poets, writers, and film fans.

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Returning the Gaze Summary

Returning the Gaze: A Genealogy of Black Film Criticism, 1909-1949 by Anna Everett

In Returning the Gaze Anna Everett revises American film history by recuperating the extensive and all-but-forgotten participation of black film critics during the early twentieth century. While much of the existing scholarship on blacks and the cinema focuses on image studies and stereotypical representations, this work excavates a wealth of early critical writing on the cinema by black cultural critics, academics, journalists, poets, writers, and film fans.
Culling black newspapers, magazines, scholarly and political journals, and monographs, Everett has produced an unparalleled investigation of black critical writing on the early cinema during the era of racial segregation in America. Correcting the notion that black critical interest in the cinema began and ended with the well-documented press campaign against D. W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation, she discovers that as early as 1909 black newspapers produced celebratory discourses about the cinema as a much-needed corrective to the predominance of theatrical blackface minstrelsy. She shows how, even before the Birth of a Nation controversy, the black press succeeded in drawing attention to both the callous commercial exploitation of lynching footage and the varied work of black film entrepreneurs. The book also reveals a feast of film commentaries that were produced during the roaring twenties and the jazz age by such writers as W.E.B. DuBois, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston, as well as additional pieces that were written throughout the Depression and the pre- and post-war periods. Situating this wide-ranging and ideologically complex material in its myriad social, political, economic, and cultural contexts, Everett aims to resuscitate a historical tradition for contemporary black film literature and criticism.
Returning the Gaze will appeal to scholars and students of film, black and ethnic studies, American studies, cultural studies, literature, and journalism.

Returning the Gaze Reviews

Anna Everett moves African American film criticism and commentary from the margins to the center in this innovative, imaginative, and original book. Superbly researched and engagingly written, Returning the Gaze shows us the necessity of placing race at the center of the history of the American cinema, while at the same time making it clear that any adequate understanding of African American identity needs to acknowledge the centrality of cinema to the practices and processes of U.S. racial formation.-George Lipsitz, author of The Possessive Investment in Whiteness and Time Passages
Everett's fine book makes an important contribution to our understanding of black cinema, from production to journalism and criticism, as a resistance practice representing every orientation of black culture, from the popular to the political and aesthetic. This one is 'must' reading for all interested in black cinema, its issues, and its critical discourse.-Ed Guerrero, New York University
Compelling and of great critical importance, Returning the Gaze makes a major contribution to film studies.-Dana Polan, University of Southern California

About Anna Everett

Anna Everett is Assistant Professor of Film Studies at the University of California at Santa Barbara.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Returning the Gaze 1
1. The Souls of Black Folk in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Black Newspaper Criticism and the Early Cinema, 1909-1916
12
2. The Birth of a Nation and Interventionist Criticism: Resisting Race as Spectacle 59
3. Cinephilia in the Black Renaissance: New Negro Film Criticism, 1916-1930 107
4. Black Modernist Dialectics and the New Deal: Accomodationist and Radical Film Criticism, 1930-1940 179
5. The Recalcitrant Gaze; Critiquing Hollywood in the 1940s 272
Epilogue 314
Notes 317
Works Cited 333
Index 349

Additional information

CIN0822326140G
9780822326144
0822326140
Returning the Gaze: A Genealogy of Black Film Criticism, 1909-1949 by Anna Everett
Used - Good
Paperback
Duke University Press
20010402
376
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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