Ebook: Soul searching : Black-themed cinema from the March on Washington to the rise of blaxploitation
Author: Sieving Christopher
- Tags: African Americans in motion pictures. African Americans in the motion picture industry. Motion pictures -- United States -- History -- 20th century. PERFORMING ARTS -- Film & Video -- Reference. ART -- Film & Video. Motion pictures. United States.
- Series: Wesleyan film
- Year: 2011
- Publisher: Wesleyan University Press
- City: Middletown, Conn., United States
- Language: English
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The sixties were a tremendously important time of transition for both civil rights activism and the U.S. film industry. Soul Searching examines a subject that, despite its significance to African American film history, has gone largely unexplored until now. By revisiting films produced between the march on Washington in 1963 and the dawn of the "blaxploitation" movie cycle in 1970, Christopher Sieving reveals how race relations influenced black-themed cinema before it was recognized as commercially viable by the major studios. The films that are central to this book--Gone Are the Days (1963), The Cool World (1964), The Confessions of Nat Turner (never produced), Uptight (1968), and The Landlord (1970)--are all ripe for reevaluation and newfound appreciation. Soul Searching is essential reading for anyone interested in the politics and cultural movements of the 1960s, cinematic trends like blaxploitation and the American "indie film" explosion, or black experience and its many facets
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