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Author Hooks, Bell.

Title Reel to real : race, sex, and class at the movies / Bell Hooks.

Imprint New York, NY : Routledge, 1996.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Special Collections Reitz  302.2343 H764r, 1996    ---  Lib Use Only
Description 244 p. ; 24 cm.
Note Includes index.
Contents Introduction: Making movie magic. -- Good girls look the other way. -- Transgression and transformation: Leaving Las Vegas. -- Exotica: breaking down to break through. -- Crooklyn: the denial of death. -- Cool cynicism: Pulp fiction. -- Mock feminism: Waiting to exhale. -- Kids: transgressive subjects - reactionary film. -- Artistic integrity: race and accountability. -- Neo-colonial fantasies of conquest: Hoop dreams. -- Doing it for daddy: black masculinity in the mainstream. -- Thinking through class: paying attention to The attendant. -- Back to the avant-garde: the progressive vision. -- What's passion got to do with it?: an interview with Marie-France Alderman. -- The cultural mix: an interview with Wayne Wang. -- Confession - filming family: an interview with Camille Billops. -- A guiding light: an interview with Charles Burnett. -- Critical contestations: a conversation with A.J. (Arthur Jaffa) -- The oppositional gaze: black female spectators. -- Is Paris burning? -- "Whose pussy is this?": a feminist comment.
Summary Although it may not be the goal of filmmaker, most of us learn something when we watch movies. They make us think. They make us feel. Occasionally they have the power to transform lives. In Reel to Real, Bell Hooks talks back to films she has watched as a way to engage the pedagogy of cinema - how film teaches its audience. Bell Hooks comes to film not as a film critic but as a cultural critic, fascinated by the issues movies raise - the way cinema depicts race, sex, and.
class. Reel to Real brings together Hooks's classic essays (on Paris is Burning or Spike Lee's She's Gotta Have it) with her newer work on such films as Girl 6, Pulp Fiction, Crooklyn, and Waiting to Exhale, and her thoughts on the world of independent cinema. Her conversations with filmmakers Charles Burnett, Julie Dash, and Arthur Jaffa are linked with critical essays to show how cinema can function subversively, even as it maintains the status quo.
Subject Motion pictures -- Social aspects -- United States.
Motion pictures -- Political aspects -- United States.
Motion picture producers and directors -- United States -- Interviews.
African American motion picture producers and directors -- Interviews
ISBN 0415918243 (PB : acid-free cover)
9780415918244 (PB : acid-free cover)
0415918235 (HB : acid-free cover)
9780415918237 (HB : acid-free cover)

 
    
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