Contact Zones: Memory, Origin, and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema

Contact Zones: Memory, Origin, and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema

by Sheila Petty
Contact Zones: Memory, Origin, and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema

Contact Zones: Memory, Origin, and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema

by Sheila Petty

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Overview

Explores the contributions of black diasporic filmmakers and thinkers to contemporary artistic and theoretical discourses.

Created at the crossroads of slavery, migration, and exile, and comprising a global population, the black diaspora is a diverse space of varied histories, experiences, and goals. Likewise, black diasporic film tends to focus on the complexities of transnational identity, which oscillates between similarity and difference and resists easy categorization. In Contact Zones author Sheila J. Petty addresses a range of filmmakers, theorists, and issues in black diasporic cinema, highlighting their ongoing influences on contemporary artistic and theoretical discourses.

Petty examines both Anglophone and Francophone films and theorists, divided according to this volume’s three thematic sections—Slavery, Migration and Exile, and Beyond Borders. The feature films and documentaries considered—which include Sankofa, Daughters of the Dust, The Man by the Shore, and Rude, among others—represent a wide range of cultures and topics. Through close textual analysis that incorporates the work of well-known diasporic thinkers like W. E. B. DuBois, Aimé Césaire, and Frantz Fanon along with contemporary notables such as Molefi Kete Asante, bell hooks, Clenora Hudson-Weems, René Depestre, Paul Gilroy, and Rinaldo Walcott, Petty details the unique ways in which black diasporic films create meaning.

By exploring a variety of African American, Caribbean, Black British, and African Canadian perspectives, Contact Zones provides a detailed survey of the diversity and vitality of black diasporic contributions to cinema and theory. This volume will be a welcome addition to the libraries of scholars and students of film studies and Africana studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814330999
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 01/08/2008
Series: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Sheila J. Petty is professor of film and video studies at the University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments     ix
Introduction     1
Africa and the Middle Passage: Recoupment of Origin in Sankofa     16
Collision of Cultures: Occulted Caribbean Histories in Sugar Cane Alley     52
Reclaiming Africa: Black Women's Discourses in Daughters of the Dust     80
Disjunction from Self: The Politics of Arrival in Soleil O     104
Arrested Memory: The Problematics of Return in Testament     127
Slippage and Mutable Histories in Deluge     154
Transnational Gazes in Frantz Fanon: Black Skin, White Mask     176
Locality, Memory, and Zombification in The Man by the Shore     196
Mapping New Boundaries: Discourses of Blackness in Rude     224
Notes     259
Bibliography     269
Index     287

What People are Saying About This

Assistant Professor of African American Studies and Film at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and Co-Editor - Frances Gateward

Contact Zones is an erudite, articulate, and much-needed examination of a celebrated, yet neglected, area of cinema. Petty's work is a welcome addition to the disciplines of film studies, Africana studies, and cultural studies.

Associate Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Toronto and Editor of New Dawn: the Journal of Black Ca - Rinaldo Walcott

Shelia J. Petty plumbs the depths of postcolonial and black diasporic expressivity to provide cogent and powerful analyses of some of the most important black cinematic excursions of the last half of the 20th century. This work stands as a witness to the power of black cinema to render complex, complicated, and cross-resonant expressions for renarrating and rethinking human life in a post-Columbus world. It is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences for anyone interested in how the modern world comes into being from a black diasporic cinematic perspective.

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