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The Politics and Poetics of Black Film: Nothing but a Man

Martin, Michael T.(Edited by)Wall, David C.(Edited by)
Part of the Studies in the Cinema of the Black Diaspora series
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Written and directed by two white men and performed by an all-black cast, Nothing But a Man (Michael Roemer, 1964) tells the story of a drifter turned family man who struggles with the pressures of small-town life and the limitations placed on him and his community in the Deep South, an area long fraught with racism. Though unmistakably about race and civil rights, the film makes no direct reference to the civil rights movement. Despite this intentional absence, contemporary audiences were acutely aware of the social context for the film's indictment of white prejudice in America. To help frame and situate the film in the context of black film studies, the book gathers primary and secondary resources, including the original screenplay, essays on the film, statements by the filmmakers, and interviews with Robert M. Young, the film's producer and cinematographer, and Khalil Gibran Muhammad, the Director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

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£9.99
Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253018501 / 9780253018502
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
20/10/2015
English
306 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%