Re-visioning tropes of womanhood in early African American all black cast movie musicals: representations of the holy woman and her transgressive counterpart in King Vidor’s Hallelujah (1929), Spencer Williams’ The blood of Jesus (1941) and Vincente Minnelli’s Cabin in the sky (1943)
[摘要] The purpose of this thesis is to interrogate cinematic representations of black female sexuality and spirituality in King Vidor’s vision of religious normalcy and black life in the deep south in ‘\(Hallelujah\)’ 1929, Spencer Williams’s 1941 independently produced religious melodrama, ‘\(The\) \(Blood\) \(of\) \(Jesus\)’, and the vaudevillesque, folkloric Hollywood musical fantasy ofVincente Minnelli’s 1943 ‘\(Cabin\) \(in\) \(The\) \(Sky\)’.The paper will examine specific cinematic configurations of black womanhood that were popularised in the all black cast American movie musicals between 1929 and 1943.The highly marked racial and gendered configurations of the Mammy and Jezebel stereotypes function, the paper will argue, as phallocentric constructs ofblack femininity, firstly in the configuration of the black church woman as the bogeywoman, unknowable, a superwoman and secondly, that of the black female condition as transgressive and the catalyst of male deviancy. During this period, the Hollywood movie industry’s propensity for authoring and fixing racial and religious categories, produced the binary manifestation of the puritanical, defeminised black church woman and her sexually transgressive counterpart.Such filmic representations of black femininities and their deleterious ascriptions and the historical institutions that produced them will be the focus of this inquiry.
[发布日期] [发布机构] University:University of Birmingham;Department:School of Languages, Cultures, Art History and Music
[效力级别] [学科分类]
[关键词] H Social Sciences;HQ The family. Marriage. Woman [时效性]