Black Cinema Treasures: Lost and Found
August, 1991
Published
242
Pages
150 b&w photos. Bib. Index.
Features
Recommended Text
Ideal for Classrooms
About Jones's Black Cinema Treasures
Focusing on a much-neglected area of film experience in America, Black Cinema Treasures furthers the preservation of America’s cultural and historic heritage, especially its African-American heritage as seen through the eyes of the African-American independent filmmakers of the 1920s through the 1950s. Ossie Davis says that the collection is one of the best sources of black “self-consciousness” in America during those decades.
“…an extremely important addition to the literature on black film… a necessary acquisition for any collection which addresses cinema.” —Library Journal
“Brief biographies and filmographies of the pioneers of black filmmaking—Oscar Micheaux, Spencer Williams, William Alexander, and George Randol—are included as are film synopses and frame blowups. An invaluable resource.” —Booklist
“The very existence of these films constitutes an impressive achievement, given the hostile climate of the time… the audiences of these films could see blacks as lawyers, detectives, and cowboys. For anyone with an interest in the social history of the movie industry.” —The San Francisco Review of Books
“…bound to take its place among notable books on films and the black experience in America.” —Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
“A handsome book, full of vintage photographs and lobby cards… As Ossie Davis says, this book is important because it ‘gives us a chance to satisfy even further that great need among us Americans to know all we can about each other.’” –—Marc Wanamaker, The Californians
Publication Date: Cloth, August 1991; Paper, January 1997.
Classroom Adoption
Black Cinema Treasures: Lost and Found is a recommended text for use in classrooms where the following subjects are being studied: Film Studies.
Focusing on a much-neglected area of film experience in America, Black Cinema Treasures furthers the preservation of America’s cultural and historic heritage, especially its African-American heritage as seen through the eyes of the African-American independent filmmakers of the 1920s through the 1950s. The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society deemed it “bound to take its place among notable books on films and the black experience in America.”
Adopted By
[“University of California, Santa Barbara for "Contemporary Black Cinema"”]
About the Author
The late G. WILLIAM JONES was professor of cinema and video in the Meadows School of the Arts, Southern Methodist University, Founder/Director of the Southwest Film/Video Archives there, and founder of the USA Film Festival in Dallas.