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Struggles for Representation Phyllis Rauch Klotman

Struggles for Representation By Phyllis Rauch Klotman

Struggles for Representation by Phyllis Rauch Klotman


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Summary

Examines over 300 non-fiction films by more than 150 African American film/videomakers and includes an extensive filmography, bibliography, and excerpts from interviews with film/videomakers. In eleven original essays, contributors explore the extraordinary scope of these aesthetic and social documents.

Struggles for Representation Summary

Struggles for Representation: African American Documentary Film and Video by Phyllis Rauch Klotman

Struggles for Representation examines over 300 non-fiction films by more than 150 African American film/videomakers and includes an extensive filmography, bibliography, and excerpts from interviews with film/videomakers. In eleven original essays, contributors explore the extraordinary scope of these aesthetic and social documents and chart a previously undiscovered territory: documentaries that examine the aesthetic, economic, historical, political, and social forces that shape the lives of black Americans, as seen from their perspectives.

Until now, scholars and critics have concentrated on black fiction film and on mainstream non-fiction films, neglecting the groundbreaking body of black non-fiction productions that offer privileged views of American life. Yet, these rich and varied works in film, video, and new electronic media, convey vast stores of knowledge and experience. Although most documentary cannot hope to match fiction film's mass appeal, it is unrivaled in its ability to portray searing, indelible impressions of black life, including concrete views of significant events and moving portraits of charismatic individuals. Documentary footage brings audiences the moments when civil rights protestors were attacked by state troopers; it provides the sights and sounds of Malcom X delivering an electrifying speech, Betty Carter performing a heart-wrenching song, and Langston Hughes strolling on a beach.

Uniting all of this work is the struggle for representation that characterizes each film-an urgent desire to convey black life in ways that counter the uninformed and often distorted representations of mass media film and television productions. African American documentaries have long been associated with struggles for social and political empowerment; for many film/videomakers, documentary is a compelling mode with which to present an alternative, more authentic narrative of black experiences and an effective critique of mainstream discourse. Thus, many socially and politically committed film/videomakers view documentary as a tool with which to interrogate and reinvent history; their works fill gaps, correct errors, and expose distortions in order to provide counter-narratives of African American experience.

Contributors include Paul Arthur, Houston A. Baker, Jr., Mark F. Baker, Pearl Bowser, Janet K. Cutler Manthia Diawara, Elizabeth Amelia Hadley, Phyllis R. Klotman, Tommy Lee Lott, Erika Muhammad, Valerie Smith, and Clyde Taylor.

About Phyllis Rauch Klotman

Phyllis R. Klotman is Professor of Afro-American Studies and Founder/Director of the Black Film Center/Archive at Indiana University. Her publications include Screenplays of the African American Experience, Frame by Frame: A Black Filmography, and with Gloria J. Gibson, Frame by Frame II: A Filmography of the African American Image, and over 30 articles/essays on African American film and literature.

Janet K. Cutler is Professor of English and Coordinator of the interdisciplinary film program at Montclair State University, where she has taught film studies for twenty years. Her published work on film and video has appeared in such journals as Black Film Review, Cineaste, Film Quarterly, and Persistence of Vision.

Table of Contents

I. Introduction (Janet K. Cutler and Phyllis R. Klotman)

II. Pioneers of Black Documentary Film (Pearl Bowser)

III. Military Rites and Wrongs: African Americans in the U.S. Armed Forces (Phyllis R. Klotman)

IV. Documenting Social Issues: Black Journal, 1968-70 (Tommy Lee Lott)

V. Eyes on the Prize: Reclaiming Black Images, Culture, and History (Elizabeth Amelia Hadley)

VI. Paths of Enlightenment: Heroes, Rebels, and Thinkers (Clyde Taylor)

VII. Rewritten on Film: Documenting the Artist (Janet K. Cutler)

VIII. Uptown Where We Belong: Space, Captivity, and the Documentary of Black Community (Mark Frederick Baker and Houston A. Baker, Jr.)

IX. Discourses of Family in Black Documentary on Film (Valerie Smith)

X. Springing Tired Chains: Experimental Film and Video (Paul Arthur)

XI. Black High-Tech Documents (Erika Muhammad)

XII. The I Narrator in Black Diaspora Documentary (Manthia Diawara)

Appendices:

Interviews with Filmmakers
Filmography
Film/Videomaker Index
Bibliography

Additional information

NLS9780253213471
9780253213471
0253213479
Struggles for Representation: African American Documentary Film and Video by Phyllis Rauch Klotman
New
Paperback
Indiana University Press
2000-01-22
520
N/A
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