Writing himself into history : Oscar Micheaux, his silent films, and his audiences

by Pearl Bowser

Paper Book, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

Arts / Bowser

Collection

Publication

New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, c2000.

Description

Writing Himself Into History is an eagerly anticipated analysis of the career and artistry surrounding the legendary Black filmmaker Oscar Micheaux. With the exception of Spike Lee, Micheaux is the most famous--and prolific--African American film director. Between 1918 and 1948 he made more than 40 "race pictures," movies made for and about African Americans. A man of immense creativity, he also wrote seven novels.    Pearl Bowser and Louise Spence concentrate here on the first decade of Micheaux's career, when Micheaux produced and directed more than twenty silent features and built a reputation as a controversial and maverick entrepreneur. Placing his work firmly within his social and cultural milieu, they also examine Micheaeux's family and life. The authors provide a close textual analysis of his surviving films (including The Symbol of the Unconquered, Within Our Gates, and Body and Soul), and highlight the rivalry between studios, dilemmas of assimilation versus separatism, gender issues, and class. In Search of Oscar Micheaux also analyzes Micheaux's career as a novelist in relation to his work as a filmmaker.             This is a much-awaited book that is especially timely as interest in Micheaux's work increases.… (more)

Call number

Arts / Bowser

Language

ISBN

9780813528038
Page: 0.1776 seconds