Negro Minstrels
Author : Charles Townsend
Publisher :
Page : 112 pages
File Size : 42,29 MB
Release : 1969
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
Author : Charles Townsend
Publisher :
Page : 112 pages
File Size : 42,29 MB
Release : 1969
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
Author : Stephen Collins Foster
Publisher :
Page : 78 pages
File Size : 43,42 MB
Release : 1910
Category : African American songs
ISBN :
Author : Jack Haverly
Publisher :
Page : 176 pages
File Size : 36,6 MB
Release : 1969
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN :
Author : Nicholas Sammond
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 232 pages
File Size : 13,43 MB
Release : 2015-08-27
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0822375788
In Birth of an Industry, Nicholas Sammond describes how popular early American cartoon characters were derived from blackface minstrelsy. He charts the industrialization of animation in the early twentieth century, its representation in the cartoons themselves, and how important blackface minstrels were to that performance, standing in for the frustrations of animation workers. Cherished cartoon characters, such as Mickey Mouse and Felix the Cat, were conceived and developed using blackface minstrelsy's visual and performative conventions: these characters are not like minstrels; they are minstrels. They play out the social, cultural, political, and racial anxieties and desires that link race to the laboring body, just as live minstrel show performers did. Carefully examining how early animation helped to naturalize virulent racial formations, Sammond explores how cartoons used laughter and sentimentality to make those stereotypes seem not only less cruel, but actually pleasurable. Although the visible links between cartoon characters and the minstrel stage faded long ago, Sammond shows how important those links are to thinking about animation then and now, and about how cartoons continue to help to illuminate the central place of race in American cultural and social life.
Author : Yuval Taylor
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 353 pages
File Size : 10,78 MB
Release : 2012-08-27
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0393070980
Investigates the origin and heyday of black minstrelsy, which in modern times is considered an embarrassment, and discusses whether or not the art form is actually still alive in the work of contemporary performers--from Dave Chappelle and Flavor Flav to Spike Lee.
Author : Marvin Edward McAllister
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 348 pages
File Size : 42,82 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807835080
In the early 1890s, black performer Bob Cole turned blackface minstrelsy on its head with his nationally recognized whiteface creation, a character he called Willie Wayside. Just over a century later, hiphop star Busta Rhymes performed a whiteface superco
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 96 pages
File Size : 47,63 MB
Release : 1975-04
Category :
ISBN :
Founded in 1943, Negro Digest (later “Black World”) was the publication that launched Johnson Publishing. During the most turbulent years of the civil rights movement, Negro Digest/Black World served as a critical vehicle for political thought for supporters of the movement.
Author :
Publisher : Martino Publishing
Page : 732 pages
File Size : 43,32 MB
Release : 1928
Category : Africa
ISBN :
Author : Shelly Eversley
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 118 pages
File Size : 26,87 MB
Release : 2004-03-29
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 1135883351
In this book, Shelly Eversley historicizes the demand for racial authenticity - what Zora Neale Hurston called 'the real Negro' - in twentieth-century American literature. Eversley argues that the modern emergence of the interest in 'the real Negro' transforms the question of what race an author belongs into a question of what it takes to belong to that race. Consequently, Paul Laurence Dunbar's Negro dialect poems were prized in the first part of the century because - written by a black man - they were not 'imitation' black, while the dialect performances by Zora Neale Hurston were celebrated because, written by a 'real' black, they were not 'imitation' white. The second half of the century, in its dismissal of material segregation, sanctions a notion of black racial meaning as internal and psychological and thus promotes a version of black racial 'truth' as invisible and interior, yet fixed within a stable conception of difference. The Real Negro foregrounds how investments in black racial specificity illuminate the dynamic terms that define what makes a text and a person 'black', while it also reveals how 'blackness', spoken and authentic, guards a more fragile, because unspoken, commitment to the purity and primacy of 'whiteness' as a stable, uncontested ideal.
Author : Annemarie Bean
Publisher : Wesleyan University Press
Page : 332 pages
File Size : 25,69 MB
Release : 1996-11-29
Category : History
ISBN : 9780819563002
A sourcebook of contemporary and historical commentary on America's first popular mass entertainment.