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8 Black Stereotypes in Hollywood Films: ‘‘I Don’t Know Nothin’ ’Bout Birthin’ No Babies!’’
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL: 1989 THROUGH 2001
- 1 Whose Town? Questioning Community and Identity 81
- 2 Places I’ve Lived 85
- 3 Engaging and Escaping in 1994 88
- 4 To Hell and Back: On the Road with Black Feminism in the ’60s and ’70s 95
- 5 Censorship and Self-Censorship 111
- 6 An Interview 114
-
PART II. MASS CULTURE AND POPULAR JOURNALISM
- 7 Watching Arsenio 127
- 8 Black Stereotypes in Hollywood Films: ‘‘I Don’t Know Nothin’ ’Bout Birthin’ No Babies!’’ 130
- 9 When Black Feminism Faces the Music, and the Music Is Rap 134
- 10 Storytellers: The Thomas–Hill Affair 138
- 11 Talking about the Gulf 141
- 12 Beyond Assimilation 144
- 13 ‘‘Why Women Won’t Relate to ‘Justice’ ’’: Losing Her Voice 147
- 14 For Whom the Bell Tolls: Why Americans Can’t Deal with Black Feminist Intellectuals 149
- 15 Miracle in East New York 161
-
PART III. NEW YORK POSTMODERNISM AND BLACK CULTURAL STUDIES
- 16 The Politics of Location: Cinema/Theory/Literature/ Ethnicity/Sexuality/Me 167
- 17 Black Feminist Criticism: A Politics of Location and Beloved 179
- 18 Why Are There No Great Black Artists? The Problem of Visuality in African American Culture 184
- 19 High Mass 195
- 20 Symposium on Political Correctness 197
- 21 The Culture War within the Culture Wars 202
- 22 Boyz N the Hood and Jungle Fever 215
-
PART IV. MULTICULTURALISM IN THE ARTS
- 23 Race, Gender, and Psychoanalysis in Forties Films 223
- 24 Multicultural Blues: An Interview with Michele Wallace 238
- 25 Multiculturalism and Oppositionality 249
- 26 Black Women in Popular Culture: From Stereotype to Heroine 264
- 27 The Search for the Good Enough Mammy: Multiculturalism, Popular Culture, and Psychoanalysis 275
-
PART V. HENRY LOUIS GATES AND AFRICAN AMERICAN POSTSTRUCTURALISM
- 28 Henry Louis Gates: A Race Man and a Scholar 289
- 29 If You Can’t Join ’Em, Beat ’Em: Stanley Crouch and Shaharazad Ali 297
- 30 Let’s Get Serious: Marching with the Million 309
- 31 Out of Step with the Million Man March 311
- 32 Neither Fish nor Fowl: The Crisis of African American Gender Relations 314
- 33 The Problem with Black Masculinity and Celebrity 318
- 34 The Fame Game 324
- 35 Skip Gates’s Africa 328
-
PART VI. QUEER THEORY AND VISUAL CULTURE
- 36 Defacing History 339
- 37 When Dream Girls Grow Old 353
- 38 The French Collection 357
- 39 Modernism, Postmodernism, and the Problem of the Visual in Afro-American Culture 364
- 40 A Fierce Flame: Marlon Riggs 379
- 41 ‘‘Harlem on My Mind’’ 382
- 42 Questions on Feminism 386
- 43 Feminism, Race, and the Division of Labor 390
- 44 Doin’ the Right Thing: Ten Years after She’s Gotta Have It 401
- 45 The Gap Alternative 410
- 46 Art on My Mind 417
- 47 Pictures Can Lie 422
- 48 The Hottentot Venus 426
- 49 Angels in America, Paris Is Burning, and Queer Theory 430
- 50 Toshi Reagon’s Birthday 454
- 51 Cheryl Dunye: Sexin’ the Watermelon 457
- 52 The Prison House of Culture: Why African Art? Why the Guggenheim? Why Now? 460
- 53 Black Female Spectatorship 474
- 54 Bamboozled: The Archive 486
- Index 495
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL: 1989 THROUGH 2001
- 1 Whose Town? Questioning Community and Identity 81
- 2 Places I’ve Lived 85
- 3 Engaging and Escaping in 1994 88
- 4 To Hell and Back: On the Road with Black Feminism in the ’60s and ’70s 95
- 5 Censorship and Self-Censorship 111
- 6 An Interview 114
-
PART II. MASS CULTURE AND POPULAR JOURNALISM
- 7 Watching Arsenio 127
- 8 Black Stereotypes in Hollywood Films: ‘‘I Don’t Know Nothin’ ’Bout Birthin’ No Babies!’’ 130
- 9 When Black Feminism Faces the Music, and the Music Is Rap 134
- 10 Storytellers: The Thomas–Hill Affair 138
- 11 Talking about the Gulf 141
- 12 Beyond Assimilation 144
- 13 ‘‘Why Women Won’t Relate to ‘Justice’ ’’: Losing Her Voice 147
- 14 For Whom the Bell Tolls: Why Americans Can’t Deal with Black Feminist Intellectuals 149
- 15 Miracle in East New York 161
-
PART III. NEW YORK POSTMODERNISM AND BLACK CULTURAL STUDIES
- 16 The Politics of Location: Cinema/Theory/Literature/ Ethnicity/Sexuality/Me 167
- 17 Black Feminist Criticism: A Politics of Location and Beloved 179
- 18 Why Are There No Great Black Artists? The Problem of Visuality in African American Culture 184
- 19 High Mass 195
- 20 Symposium on Political Correctness 197
- 21 The Culture War within the Culture Wars 202
- 22 Boyz N the Hood and Jungle Fever 215
-
PART IV. MULTICULTURALISM IN THE ARTS
- 23 Race, Gender, and Psychoanalysis in Forties Films 223
- 24 Multicultural Blues: An Interview with Michele Wallace 238
- 25 Multiculturalism and Oppositionality 249
- 26 Black Women in Popular Culture: From Stereotype to Heroine 264
- 27 The Search for the Good Enough Mammy: Multiculturalism, Popular Culture, and Psychoanalysis 275
-
PART V. HENRY LOUIS GATES AND AFRICAN AMERICAN POSTSTRUCTURALISM
- 28 Henry Louis Gates: A Race Man and a Scholar 289
- 29 If You Can’t Join ’Em, Beat ’Em: Stanley Crouch and Shaharazad Ali 297
- 30 Let’s Get Serious: Marching with the Million 309
- 31 Out of Step with the Million Man March 311
- 32 Neither Fish nor Fowl: The Crisis of African American Gender Relations 314
- 33 The Problem with Black Masculinity and Celebrity 318
- 34 The Fame Game 324
- 35 Skip Gates’s Africa 328
-
PART VI. QUEER THEORY AND VISUAL CULTURE
- 36 Defacing History 339
- 37 When Dream Girls Grow Old 353
- 38 The French Collection 357
- 39 Modernism, Postmodernism, and the Problem of the Visual in Afro-American Culture 364
- 40 A Fierce Flame: Marlon Riggs 379
- 41 ‘‘Harlem on My Mind’’ 382
- 42 Questions on Feminism 386
- 43 Feminism, Race, and the Division of Labor 390
- 44 Doin’ the Right Thing: Ten Years after She’s Gotta Have It 401
- 45 The Gap Alternative 410
- 46 Art on My Mind 417
- 47 Pictures Can Lie 422
- 48 The Hottentot Venus 426
- 49 Angels in America, Paris Is Burning, and Queer Theory 430
- 50 Toshi Reagon’s Birthday 454
- 51 Cheryl Dunye: Sexin’ the Watermelon 457
- 52 The Prison House of Culture: Why African Art? Why the Guggenheim? Why Now? 460
- 53 Black Female Spectatorship 474
- 54 Bamboozled: The Archive 486
- Index 495