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Queering I Am Not Your Negro: or Why We Need James Baldwin More Than Ever [PDF]
The author reviews Raoul Peck’s 2016 film, I Am Not Your Negro, finding it a remarkable achievement as a documentary that breaks with cinematic conventions and emphasizes the importance of listening as much as looking.
Robert J. Corber
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Baldwin’s Transatlantic Reverberations: Between “Stranger in the Village” and I Am Not Your Negro [PDF]
James Baldwin’s writing, his persona, as well as his public speeches, interviews, and discussions are undergoing a renewed reception in the arts, in queer and critical race studies, and in queer of color movements.
Jovita dos Santos Pinto +4 more
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I am not your negro, film de Raoul Peck, 2017, 94 min.
Thierry Pastorello
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The Evidence of Things Translated: Circulating Baldwin in Contemporary Europe
For several years now, James Baldwin’s life, portrait, and work have enjoyed a central place in the public eye. Although social and audiovisual media have made significant contributions to Baldwin’s return to the cultural and political limelight, the ...
Remo Verdickt
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“A Very Dangerous Effort”; James Baldwin’s Encounter with the BBC in 1963
The author reviews the recently released short film The Baldwin Archives (Laura Seay, 2022), and argues that, in restaging the most important moments of Baldwin’s 1963 interview for the BBC television program Bookstand, it helps us understand better ...
Robert J. Corber
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Trends in Baldwin Criticism, 2016–17
This review article charts the general direction of scholarship in James Baldwin studies between the years 2016 and 2017, reflecting on important scholarly events and publications of the period and identifying notable trends in criticism.
Joseph Vogel
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The Process of Writing a Book about Baldwin’s Self-Exile in Saint-Paul de Vence
Rather than write a classic biography of James Baldwin in the last cycle of his life—from his arrival in 1970 as a black stranger in the all-white medieval village of Saint-Paul, until his death there in 1987—I sought to discover the author through the ...
Jules B. Farber
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They don’t want to realize that there is not one step, morally or actually, between Birmingham and Los Angeles. - James Baldwin, I Am Not Your Negro (2017) This article explores the jurisprudential underpinnings of the so-called “diversity rationale”
Daniel Kees
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“He Gave Me the Words”: An Interview with Raoul Peck
I Am Not Your Negro (2016) takes its direction from the notes for a book entitled “Remember this House” that James Baldwin left unfinished, a book about his three friends—Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King Jr.— their murders, and their ...
Leah Mirakhor
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Trends in James Baldwin Criticism 2010–13
The acceleration of interest in Baldwin’s work and impact since 2010 shows no signs of diminishing. This resurgence has much to do with Baldwin—the richness and passionate intensity of his vision—and also something to do with the dedicated scholars who ...
D.Quentin Miller
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