Cinethetic Racism: White Redemption and Black Stereotypes in "Magical Negro" Films

Recent research on African American media representations describes a trend of progressive, antiracist film production. Specifically, "magical negro" films (cinema highlighting lower-class, uneducated, and magical black characters who transform disheveled, uncultured, or broken white chara...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social problems (Berkeley, Calif.) Calif.), 2009-08, Vol.56 (3), p.543-577
1. Verfasser: Hughey, Matthew W.
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description Recent research on African American media representations describes a trend of progressive, antiracist film production. Specifically, "magical negro" films (cinema highlighting lower-class, uneducated, and magical black characters who transform disheveled, uncultured, or broken white characters into competent people) have garnered both popular and critical acclaim. I build upon such evidence as a cause for both celebration and alarm. I first examine how notions of historical racism in cinema inform our comprehension of racial representations today. These understandings create an interpretive environment whereby magical black characters are relationally constructed as both positive and progressive. I then advance a production of culture approach that examines 26 films that resonate with mainstream audiences' understanding of race relations and racialized fantasies. I find that these films constitute "cinethetic racism"—a synthesis of overt manifestations of racial cooperation and egalitarianism with latent expressions of white normativity and antiblack stereotypes. "Magical negro" films thus function to marginalize black agency, empower normalized and hegemonic forms of whiteness, and glorify powerful black characters in so long as they are placed in racially subservient positions. The narratives of these films thereby subversively reaffirm the racial status quo and relations of domination by echoing the changing and mystified forms of contemporary racism rather than serving as evidence of racial progress or a decline in the significance of race.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts
subjects African American culture
African Americans
Black White Relations
Civil rights
Cultures and civilizations
Ethnic relations. Racism
Film criticism
Mass Media Images
Motion picture festivals
Motion picture industry
Movies
Narratives
Normativity
Race relations
Racism
Social Reproduction
Sociology
Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
Sociology of leisure and mass culture
Stereotypes
United States of America
White people
Whiteness studies
title Cinethetic Racism: White Redemption and Black Stereotypes in "Magical Negro" Films
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