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Allyson Nadia Field

Uplift Cinema: The Emergence of African American Film and the Possibility of Black Modernity

Uplift Cinema: The Emergence of African American Film and the Possibility of Black Modernity

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In Uplift Cinema, Allyson Nadia Field recovers the significant yet forgotten legacy of African American filmmaking in the 1910s. Like the racial uplift project, this cinema emphasized economic self-sufficiency, education, and respectability as the keys to African American progress. Field discusses films made at the Tuskegee and Hampton Institutes to promote education, as well as the controversial The New Era, which was an antiracist response to D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation. She also shows how Black filmmakers in New York and Chicago engaged with uplift through the promotion of Black modernity. Uplift cinema developed not just as a response to onscreen racism, but constituted an original engagement with the new medium that has had a deep and lasting significance for African American cinema. Although none of these films survived, Field's examination of archival film ephemera presents a method for studying lost films that opens up new frontiers for exploring early film culture.

Binding Type: Paperback
Author: Field, Allyson Nadia
Published: 06/08/2015
Publisher: Duke University Press
ISBN: 9780822358817
Pages: 344
Weight: 0.86lbs
Size: 8.86h x 5.99w x 0.49d
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