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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 1:09 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Slavery]: Harcourt on Martin, 'The Birth of a
Nation: The Cinematic Past in the Present'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Michael T. Martin.  The Birth of a Nation: The Cinematic Past in the
Present.  Bloomington  Indiana University Press, 2019.  344 pp.
$20.00 (paper), ISBN 978-0-253-04235-4.

Reviewed by Felix Harcourt (Austin College)
Published on H-Slavery (March, 2020)
Commissioned by David M. Prior

Growing out of a 2015 symposium convened by the Black Film
Center/Archive at Indiana University, Bloomington, the loose
organizing principle of the essays in _The Birth of a Nation: The
Cinematic Past in the Present _is to consider the impact and enduring
legacy of D. W. Griffith's 1915 film _Birth of a Nation _on the
racism and xenophobia that remain part of the mainstream of US
cultural life. Bringing together authors from a range of scholarly
enterprises and academic disciplines, editor Michael T. Martin makes
clear that this collection is intended to speak to our current
moment. For Martin, both the symposium and the publication of this
volume were prompted by a pressing need to address the enduring
"hegemonic structures in the American social formation that support
and maintain white supremacy and social inequality" (p. ix).

To that end, the scholarship here is divided into three sections,
explained by Martin as _Birth of a Nation _as "text, artifact, and
cultural legacy," _Birth _in "historical time--then," and _Birth _in
"historical time--now" (p. 18). In practical terms, this provides the
reader with five chapters in the first section examining _Birth of a
Nation _as a tangible filmic enterprise, with particular attention to
audience response, whether in the form of outrage or inspiration. In
the third section, we find five chapters focused on _Birth _in
conversation with a range of modern filmmaking efforts, and the ways
in which the 1915 film continues to exert influence. This tripartite
construction unfortunately leaves just two chapters in the limbo of
the second section of the collection, seemingly excommunicated as
neither beast nor bird despite perhaps best embodying the stated
goals of the book.

The avowedly presentist and "imminently practical" (p. ix) ethos of
the collection can make for an uneasy balance. Where the focus is on
_Birth of a Nation _as historical product, as in the first five
essays, the effort to explicitly tie the film to current events can
feel forced. In Cara Caddoo's excellent consideration of Black
protest against the film, for example, a final few paragraphs on the
violence of Charleston and the actions of Bree Newsome seem an
unnecessary addition. By the time Newsome appears, Caddoo has already
made a convincing case as to the contemporary lessons that can be
learned from anti-_Birth _activists. More than simply the legalistic
battles of middle-class NAACP officials that have often taken center
stage in discussions of Black response to the film, Caddoo point us
toward a far wider range of individuals, interests, and tactics in
the struggle for social and cultural power.

This balance tips in the other direction in the final five chapters
of the collection. Concerned primarily with race and racism in
current cinema, these essays engage both with films that readers may
expect to find (Quentin Tarantino's 2012 _Django Unchained _or Steve
McQueen's 2013 _12 Years a Slave_) and some more unexpected choices
(the 2015 Will Ferrell/Kevin Hart comedy _Get Hard_). These pieces
have some significant points to make about _Birth_. David C. Wall,
for one, makes explicit the key point that _Birth's _"aesthetic is
its racism" (p. 260) and that the two cannot be disentangled. At the
same time, though, _Birth of a Nation _itself often appears something
of an afterthought in a number of these chapters--a peg upon which to
hang otherwise thoughtful and useful analyses of the cinematic
language of race. This can lead to some puzzlingly ahistorical
claims, including the idea that effective satires of the Ku Klux
Klan's racism are a purely modern phenomenon.

This leaves our two orphaned chapters as the Goldilocks of the
collection--neither too hot nor too cold. Linda Williams's
contextualization of _Birth _and Oscar Micheaux's _Within Our Gates
_(1920) as racial melodramas competing over the thesis of whether
Black lives matter offers a measured balance of the two competing
tendencies of the collection, speaking comfortably to the present
about the past. Lawrence Howe, who places _Birth _in the tradition of
the Southern romance, provides a compelling analysis of the ways in
which Griffith built on aesthetics of scholarship "to persuade his
audience of the film's reliability and historical authority" (p.
166).

Howe's argument also speaks to a more persuasive central theme.
Almost all of the essays found here work, implicitly or explicitly,
to deconstruct the idea of _Birth of a Nation _as a "classic" and
raise probing questions as to the culpability of critics and
academics in extending the life and reach of the film's racist
screed. Whether the film is a Western or a Southern, the nation's
first blockbuster, or a groundbreaking directorial work are
conversations that must be--and here, for once, are--placed within a
wider context. To separate artistry from racist ideology is an
artificial division that hinders our understanding of the film and
its legacy. It is beyond time that we recognize that any discussion
of _Birth _as cinematic art must be grounded in an understanding of
_Birth _as racist propaganda. This is the major contribution of
Martin's collection.

Citation: Felix Harcourt. Review of Martin, Michael T., _The Birth of
a Nation: The Cinematic Past in the Present_. H-Slavery, H-Net
Reviews. March, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54641

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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