The Regal Theater and Black Culture
Chronicling over forty years of changes in African-American popular culture, the Regal Theatre (1928-1968) was the largest movie-stage-show venue ever constructed for a Black community. Semmes reveals the political, economic and business realities of cultural production and the institutional inequalities that circumscribed Black life.
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The Regal Theater and Black Culture
Chronicling over forty years of changes in African-American popular culture, the Regal Theatre (1928-1968) was the largest movie-stage-show venue ever constructed for a Black community. Semmes reveals the political, economic and business realities of cultural production and the institutional inequalities that circumscribed Black life.
54.99 In Stock
The Regal Theater and Black Culture

The Regal Theater and Black Culture

by C. Semmes
The Regal Theater and Black Culture

The Regal Theater and Black Culture

by C. Semmes

Paperback(2006)

$54.99 
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Overview

Chronicling over forty years of changes in African-American popular culture, the Regal Theatre (1928-1968) was the largest movie-stage-show venue ever constructed for a Black community. Semmes reveals the political, economic and business realities of cultural production and the institutional inequalities that circumscribed Black life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780230113152
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan US
Publication date: 04/04/2011
Edition description: 2006
Pages: 294
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Clovis E. Semmes is Professor of Black Studies and Sociology and Director of Black Studies at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and Professor Emeritus of African American Studies at Eastern Michigan University. He earned a Ph.D. in sociology from Northwestern University. Semmes’s teaching and research include the impact of systemic inequality on African American institutional and cultural development, the conceptual and theoretical foundations of knowledge in African American studies, African American expressive and popular culture, comparative urban communities, and health systems and practices among African Americans, especially alternative and non-medical health systems and practices. Among his publications are Cultural Hegemony and African American Development; Racism, Health, and Post-Industrialism; and Roots of Afrocentric Thought: A Reference Guide to Negro Digest/Black World, 1961-1976.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction The Opening: Separate But Equal The Depression Years: Privilege in the Marketplace and Black Stewardship The End of Monopoly and the End of Swing The Decline of Commercial Segregation and the Transition to Independence Rebirth, Black Ownership, and the Closing of the Palace Retrospect and Lessons Learned Bibliography
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