Description

The historic election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States had a significant impact on both America and the world at large. By voting an African American into the highest office, those who elected Obama did not necessarily look past race, but rather didn’t let race prevent them for casting their ballots in his favor. In addition to reflecting the changing political climate, Obama’s presidency also spurred a cultural shift, notably in music, television, and film.

In Movies in the Age of Obama: The Era of Post-Racial and Neo-Racist Cinema, David Garrett Izzo presents a varied collection of essays that examine films produced since the 2008 election. The contributors to these essays comment on a number of films in which race and “otherness” are pivotal elements. In addition to discussing such films as Beasts of the Southern Wild, Black Dynamite, The Blind Side, The Butler, Django Unchained, The Help, and Invictus, this collection also includes essays that probe racial elements in The Great Gatsby, The Hunger Games, and The Mist. The volume concludes with several essays that examine the 2013 Academy Award winner for best picture, 12 Years a Slave.

Though Obama’s election may have been the main impetus for a resurgence of black films, this development is a bit more complicated. Moviemakers have long responded to the changing times, so it is inevitable that the Obama presidency would spark an increase in films that comment, either subtly or overtly, on the current cultural climate. By looking at the issue these films address, Movies in the Age of Obama will be of value to film scholars, of course, but also to those interested in other disciplines, including history, politics, and cultural studies.

Table of Contents

Introduction
David Garrett Izzo
Part I: Resonance from the Past: Experience Is Learned Backward But Must Be Lived Forward
Chapter 1 - “I Really Need a Maid!” White Womanhood in The Help
Kwakiutl L. Dreher
Chapter 2 - Gwendolyn Brooks's Bronzeville and Tate Taylor's Jackson: “Art hurts. Art urges voyages-and it is easier to stay at home.”
Blake G. Hobby
Chapter 3 - If Django and Lincoln Could Talk: James Baldwin Goes to the Movies
Robert McParland
Chapter 4 - The Exceptional N*gger: Redefining African American Identity in Django Unchained
Rodney M. D. Fierce
Chapter 5 - Blaxploitation in the Age of Obama: Black Dynamite, Django Unchained, Racial Reasoning, and Racial Capitalism
Brian E. Butler
Chapter 6 - Between The Butler and Black Dynamite: Servility, Militancy, and the Meaning of Blaxploitation
Andrew Grossman
Chapter 7 - Rednecks, Racism, and Religion: King and Darabont's Precarious Prophecy of Obama's Coming
Victoria McCollum
Part II: The Present Is an Eternal Now Connecting Past and Fut

Product details

Published 09 Dec 2017
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 314
ISBN 9780810895348
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions 229 x 151 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

David Garrett Izzo

Contributor

Linda Belau

Contributor

Thomas Britt

Contributor

Sonya C. Brown

Contributor

Brian E. Butler

Contributor

Ed Cameron

Contributor

Kwakiutl L. Dreher

Kwakiutl L. Dreher is Associate Professor of Engli…

Contributor

Andrew Grossman

Contributor

Blake G. Hobby

Contributor

David M. Jones

Contributor

Robert McParland

Robert McParland is Professor of English and the H…

Contributor

doug morris

Contributor

Irina Negrea

Contributor

Sohinee Roy

Contributor

Alisha Saiyed

Contributor

Cammie Sublette

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