Very effective crtiique of bubbleheaded cartoon director Tarantino's
Django at
The New Yorker--effective because this professor of African-American history offers some praises and admits cleverness. But also: A white director ridiculing an "Uncle Tom" black in contrast to seemingly the one slave willing to take on the system.
The film’s defenders are quick to point out that “Django” is not
about history. But that’s almost like arguing that fiction is not
reality—it isn’t, but the entire appeal of the former is its capacity to
shed light on how we understand the latter. In my sixteen years of
teaching African-American history, one sadly common theme has been the
number of black students who shy away from courses dealing with slavery
out of shame that slaves never fought back.
It seems almost pedantic to point out that slavery was nothing like
this. The slaveholding class existed in a state of constant paranoia
about slave rebellions, escapes, and a litany of more subtle attempts to
undermine the institution. Nearly two hundred thousand black men, most
of them former slaves, enlisted in the Union Army in order to accomplish
en masse precisely what Django attempts to do alone: risk death in
order to free those whom they loved. Tarantino’s attempt to craft a hero
who stands apart from the other men—black and white—of his time is not a
riff on history, it’s a riff on the mythology we’ve mistaken for
history. Were the film aware of that distinction, “Django” would be far
less troubling—but it would also be far less resonant. The alternate
history is found not in the story of vengeful ex-slave but in the idea
that he could be the only one.
3 comments:
Thank you for this.
You shine light on
a variety of issues
I wouldn't have
otherwise
thought
of.
Thank you for this.
You have shined
light on a
number of
issues
that probably
wouldn't have
occurred to me.
Thank you for this.
You have shined
light on a
number of
issues
that probably
wouldn't have
occurred to me.
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