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The Advertising Age Encyclopedia of Advertising

[PDF] The Advertising Age Encyclopedia of Advertising by John McDonough; Karen Egolf at Arts-Photography

Description

In The Captive Stage; Douglas A. Jones; Jr. argues that proslavery ideology remained the dominant mode of racial thought in the antebellum north; even though chattel slavery had virtually disappeared from the region by the turn of the nineteenth centurymdash;and that northerners cultivated their proslavery imagination most forcefully in their performance practices. Jones explores how multiple constituencies; ranging from early national artisans and Jacksonian wage laborers to patrician elites and bourgeois social reformers; used the stage to appropriate and refashion defenses of black bondage as means to affirm their varying and often conflicting economic; political; and social objectives. Joining performance studies with literary criticism and cultural theory; he uncovers the proslavery conceptions animating a wide array of performance texts and practices; such as the ldquo;Bobalitionrdquo; series of broadsides; blackface minstrelsy; stagings of the American Revolution; reform melodrama; and abolitionist discourse. Taken together; he suggests; these works did not amount to a call for the re-enslavement of African Americans but; rather; justifications for everyday and state-sanctioned racial inequities in their post-slavery society. Throughout; The Captive Stage elucidates how the proslavery imagination of the free north emerged in direct opposition to the inclusionary claims black publics enacted in their own performance cultures. In doing so; the book offers fresh contexts and readings of several forms of black cultural production; including early black nationalist parades; slave dance; the historiography of the revolutionary era; the oratory of radical abolitionists and the black convention movement; and the autobiographical and dramatic work of ex-slave William Wells Brown.


#3402661 in eBooks 2015-06-18 2015-06-18File Name: B00ZXV0V6O


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Excellent! I love film historyBy cemeterymindaIts very clear Ms. Bible has a passion for the history of film. This is a very interesting book that shows where old movies were filmed. Informative and enjoyable. Thanks; Karie!0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A good history of location shooting in ad around Los Angeles and Hollywood.By M. FrancisFor the Los Angeles / Hollywood film buff; this is an excellent book. The descriptions of the photos lets you know exactly where the shots were located; so you could find them now; if you were looking; although many of the landmarks no longer exist. It shows how all of Los Angeles was once a "company" town; the company being making movies.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Overpriced and UndersizedBy John SwitzerToo bad for us that despite this excellent books price; the publisher cheaped out on the size making a potentially excellent book just so-so. This goes for the entire series.

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