Showing posts with label american History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american History. Show all posts
Thursday, December 20, 2012
The shadow and the substance
There is validity in writer Te-Nehisi Coates' observation that the story of the American civil war thus far has largely been a story for white people in which blacks have been passive recipients of the benevolence of their white saviors.
According to Maurice Berger, the tradition of a one-sided story-telling continues in Steven Spielberg's new film Lincoln, which gives a nuanced portrayal of Lincoln but is "almost devoid of images of active black resistance and protest and overall participation in their own cause."
But slaves were crucial agents in their own emancipation, especially through a prolific use of the power of photography, or, as it was known at that time, daguerreography.
Envisioning Emancipation, a book co-authored by Deborah Willis and Barbara Krauthamer, explores how black abolitionists (emancipated slaves who championed freedom for their fellow slaves) like Sojourner Truth and Fredrick Douglass, used the medium of photography to fight the intricate battle of changing minds and hearts in favor of emancipation.
A fascinating trivia about Sojourner Truth: She may have been the first black woman to actively distribute photographs of herself. But her self-publicity wasn't of a blatantly narcissistic kind as her portraits were meant to affirm her status as "a sophisticated and respectable free woman and as a woman in control of her own image."
Truth had a supreme critical perspective on the role of image; while she sold her own photographs to raise money for the cause, she said, "I sell the shadow to support the substance."
(Wow!)
Tags:
american History
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Civil War
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Emancipation
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Photography
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Slavery
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Thursday, November 1, 2012
History Lessons
Novelist Dennis Lehane picks Hampton Sides' HellHound on Trial, as one of the great books he has recently read.
Says Lehane about his choice:
It’s a gripping evocation of a seismic American tragedy — the assassination of Martin Luther King. It speaks volumes about the evil of those who stoke and pervert populist rage for their own ends. Like any great book about the past, it illuminates the present with uncommon clarity.The "present" in this case happens to be the perils of history repeating itself, not anymore as a farce (as Marx had said about historical events of the 19th century), but as a beyond-tragedy.
Tags:
american History
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Fiction
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History
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Literature
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