Hollywood's African American Films: The Transition to Sound

Hollywood's African American Films: The Transition to Sound

by Ryan Jay Friedman
Hollywood's African American Films: The Transition to Sound

Hollywood's African American Films: The Transition to Sound

by Ryan Jay Friedman

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Overview


In 1929 and 1930, during the Hollywood studios' conversion to synchronized-sound film production, white-controlled trade magazines and African American newspapers celebrated a "vogue" for "Negro films." "Hollywood's African American Films" argues that the movie business turned to black musical performance to both resolve technological and aesthetic problems introduced by the medium of "talking pictures" and, at the same time, to appeal to the white "Broadway" audience that patronized their most lucrative first-run theaters. Capitalizing on highbrow associations with white "slumming" in African American cabarets and on the cultural linkage between popular black musical styles and "natural" acoustics, studios produced a series of African American-cast and white-cast films featuring African American sequences. Ryan Jay Friedman asserts that these transitional films reflect contradictions within prevailing racial ideologies--arising most clearly in the movies' treatment of African American characters' decisions to migrate. Regardless of how the films represent these choices, they all prompt elaborate visual and narrative structures of containment that tend to highlight rather than suppress historical tensions surrounding African American social mobility, Jim Crow codes, and white exploitation of black labor.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813550800
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Publication date: 07/27/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Ryan Jay Friedman is an assistant professor in the department of English and the program in film studies at The Ohio State University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Negro Talking Pictures
1. "Black Became the Fad": White Highbrow Culture and Negro Films
2. "The Negro Invades Hollywood": The Great Migration, the Studios, and the Performance of African American Social Mobility
3. On (With the) Show: Race and Female Bodily Spectacle in Early Hollywood Sound Film
4. The Unhomely Plantation: Racial Phantasmagoria in Hallelujah
5. Blackness without African Americans: Check and Double Check and the Dialectics of Cinematic Blackface
Conclusion: "The Required Negro Motif" after the Transition to Sound

Notes
Index
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