This thesis investigates the political conjuncture surrounding the U.S. New Communist Movement’s break with the New Left of the 1960s, tracing the coordinates of this ideological shift through the lens of committed documentary. I argue that a materialist analysis of committed documentary necessitates understanding the form according to an aesthetics of political use-value. By attending to the question of documentary’s political utility, I demonstrate how films were used as cultural tools for conducting hegemonic struggles over certain political issues. Focusing on the contested dialectical relation between class and race, I trace period debates over the political status of the black proletariat through readings of four documentaries: Columb...
This dissertation examines the operations and impact of racial liberalism on popular memory texts of...
This thesis analyses the relationship between American documentary and the reorganisation of the car...
This dissertation is a study of the production of black American cinema between 1986-1993. My analys...
This dissertation explores how cinema was an important outlet that artists and activists in the 1960...
Social documentary filmmaking cannot be undertaken in a theoretical void, regardless of the intentio...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Program in Visual and Cultural Studies, 2010.In Expose, Im...
This essay utilizes concepts from screen theory to better understand the function of socially engage...
textFor well over a century, non-fiction film has figured prominently in the public sphere as a pow...
After World War II, U.S. documentarians engaged in a rigorous rethinking of established documentary ...
In this dissertation I consider how independent cinema of the post civil rights era represents and n...
In the 1970s, the Black Power Movement presented post-Civil Rights America with an articulate and ou...
After the New Left: U.S. Cultural Radicalism and the Central America Solidarity Movement, 1979-1992 ...
Between 1988 and 2002, the films Mississippi Burning (1988), Ghosts of Mississippi (1996), Malcolm ...
This dissertation suggests a new way of thinking about relations between social movements and capita...
Sociologists have long recognized the important intersection of media coverage and social movements,...
This dissertation examines the operations and impact of racial liberalism on popular memory texts of...
This thesis analyses the relationship between American documentary and the reorganisation of the car...
This dissertation is a study of the production of black American cinema between 1986-1993. My analys...
This dissertation explores how cinema was an important outlet that artists and activists in the 1960...
Social documentary filmmaking cannot be undertaken in a theoretical void, regardless of the intentio...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Program in Visual and Cultural Studies, 2010.In Expose, Im...
This essay utilizes concepts from screen theory to better understand the function of socially engage...
textFor well over a century, non-fiction film has figured prominently in the public sphere as a pow...
After World War II, U.S. documentarians engaged in a rigorous rethinking of established documentary ...
In this dissertation I consider how independent cinema of the post civil rights era represents and n...
In the 1970s, the Black Power Movement presented post-Civil Rights America with an articulate and ou...
After the New Left: U.S. Cultural Radicalism and the Central America Solidarity Movement, 1979-1992 ...
Between 1988 and 2002, the films Mississippi Burning (1988), Ghosts of Mississippi (1996), Malcolm ...
This dissertation suggests a new way of thinking about relations between social movements and capita...
Sociologists have long recognized the important intersection of media coverage and social movements,...
This dissertation examines the operations and impact of racial liberalism on popular memory texts of...
This thesis analyses the relationship between American documentary and the reorganisation of the car...
This dissertation is a study of the production of black American cinema between 1986-1993. My analys...