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"Imaging Blackness, 1915-2002:
Film Posters from the
The Black Film Center/Archive will be showcasing its film poster collection at the IU Art Museum October 11 through December 21, 2003. From Sleepy Sam the Sleuth (1915) to Spike Lee's Jim Brown: All-American (2002), over fifty posters from different eras and genres will be featured. The Black Presence in Hollywood Films"…with the release of "The Birth of a Nation" the propagation of subhuman images of Negroes became financially and dramatically profitable. The Negro as scapegoat could be sold as entertainment…. If the film became the main manipulator of the American dream, for Negroes that dream contained a strong dose of such stuff as nightmares are made of." We have come a long way since the release of J.W. Griffith's masterfully racist "The Birth of a Nation," (1915) caused rioting in the streets of America. Although racial parity has yet to be realized and stereotypes still exist, the black image in film is today not what it once was. The presence of Black filmmakers, producers, writers, cinematographers, actors, and technicians makes viewing and studying films about black experiences more interesting and entertaining for all audiences, and a beacon for scholarly engagement and study. The Exhibit:
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Queries: bfca@indiana.edu
URL: http://www.indiana.edu/~bfca
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Copyright 1996, The Trustees of Indiana University