Description
Book SynopsisAllyson Nadia Field recovers the forgotten body of African American filmmaking from the 1910s which she calls uplift cinema. These films were part of the racial uplift project, which emphasized education, respectability, and self-sufficiency, and weren't only responses to racist representations of African Americans in other films.
Trade Review"Allyson Nadia Field in
Uplift Cinema has immediately established herself as a leading scholar in the study of early black film.....
Uplift Cinema is written in a highly accessible style for historians of all stripes. Most importantly, the volume will be seminal not only for scholars of black film but also for those working in African American history and the early Progressive Era." -- Gerald R. Butters Jr. * Journal of American History *
"Allyson Nadia Field has made a vital scholarly contribution;
Uplift Cinema is a rich book with much to offer film historians, scholars of African American history, and those interested in visual media. She has expanded our understanding of the scope and range of African American filmmaking and she makes a convincing argument for the continued importance of the film text as a primary source for film historians, even—as with uplift cinema—when it no longer exists in material form." -- Julie Lavelle * Black Camera *
"
Uplift Cinema is a significant historical interpretation and contribution to the complex, contradictory, multifaceted, and challenging ways nascent African- American film makers and leaders in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century struggled to create positive enduring representative images of black people 'up from slavery.'" -- Theodoric Manley * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
"Field’s book is, at once, an unprecedented reading of an important set of films and analysis of those works and their effects on filmmakers working in their wake ... and a manifesto and model for doing cinema history when film texts themselves are lost. The detail and depth of Field’s work will make it of most interest to specialists, but her clear writing and organization makes her impressive research accessible to undergraduates and more general readers in film studies, social and cultural history, and American and African American studies." -- Arthur Knight * History *
Table of ContentsPreface ix
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction 1
1. The Aesthetics of Uplift: The Hampton-Tuskegee Idea and the Possibility of Failure 33
2. "To Show the Industrial Progress of the Negro Along Industrial Lines": Uplift Cinema Entrepreneurs at Tuskegee Institute, 1909–1913 83
3. "Pictorial Sermons": The Campaign Films of Hampton Institute, 1913–1915 121
4. "A Vicious and Hurtful Play":
The Birth of a Nation and
The New Era, 1915 151
5. To "Encourage and Uplift": Entrepreneurial Uplift Cinema 185
Epilogue 245
Notes 259
Bibliography 299
Index 311