Home Arts 10 Televising Watts: Joe Saltzman’s Black on Black (1968) on KNXT
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10 Televising Watts: Joe Saltzman’s Black on Black (1968) on KNXT

  • Joshua Glick
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© 2019 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

© 2019 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter ii
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. NOTE ON THE COMPANION WEBSITE ix
  4. FOREWORD Giving Voice, Taking Voice: Nonwhite and Nontheatrical xi
  5. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xxv
  6. Introduction 1
  7. 1 "A Vanishing Race”? The Native American Films of J. K. Dixon 29
  8. 2 "Regardless of Race, Color, or Creed” Filming the Henry Street Settlement Visiting Nurse Service, 1924–1933 51
  9. 3 I’ll See You in Church” Local Films in African American Communities, 1924–1962 71
  10. 4 The Politics of Vanishing Celluloid: Fort Rupert (1951) and the Kwakwaka’wakw in American Ethnographic Film 92
  11. 5 Red Star/Black Star: The Early Career of Film Editor Hortense “Tee” Beveridge, 1948–1968 112
  12. 6 Charles and Ray Eames’s Day of the Dead (1957) Mexican Folk Art, Educational Film, and Chicana/o Art 136
  13. 7 Ever-Widening Horizons? The National Urban League and the Pathologization of Blackness in A Morning for Jimmy (1960) 157
  14. 8 "A Touch of the Orient” Negotiating Japanese American Identity in The Challenge (1957) 175
  15. 9 "I Have My Choice” Behind Every Good Man (1967) and the Black Queer Subject in American Nontheatrical Film 194
  16. 10 Televising Watts: Joe Saltzman’s Black on Black (1968) on KNXT 217
  17. 11 "A New Sense of Black Awareness”? Navigating Expectations in The Black Cop (1969) 236
  18. 12 "Don’t Be a Segregationist: Program Films for Everyone” The New York Public Library’s Film Library and Youth Film Workshops 253
  19. 13 Teenage Moviemaking in the Lower East Side: The Rivington Street Film Club, 1966–1974 271
  20. 14 Ro-Revus Talks about Race: South Carolina Malnutrition and Parasite Films, 1968–1975 290
  21. 15 Government-Sponsored Film and Latinidad: Voice of La Raza (1971) 313
  22. 16 An Aesthetics of Multiculturalism: Asian American Assimilation and the Learning Corporation of America’s Many Americans Series (1970–1982) 333
  23. 17 "The Right Kind of Family” Memories to Light and the Home Movie as Racialized Technology 353
  24. 18 Black Home Movies: Time to Represent 372
  25. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 393
  26. CONTRIBUTORS 401
  27. INDEX 403
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