The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century

Beginning in the late 1960s, the Black Arts Movement grew as the cultural wing of the Black Power Movement. It was represented by a rich cross section of artistic work, often forged by young urban artists in genres as diverse as music, dance, visual arts, literature and theatre. No aesthetic was una...

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Main Author: Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2019-04-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/14366
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author Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar
author_facet Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar
author_sort Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar
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description Beginning in the late 1960s, the Black Arts Movement grew as the cultural wing of the Black Power Movement. It was represented by a rich cross section of artistic work, often forged by young urban artists in genres as diverse as music, dance, visual arts, literature and theatre. No aesthetic was unaffected by inflections of this new black consciousness. This article explores the ways in which, a half-century after the Black Arts Movement, African Americans in television have cultivated an aesthetic and politics that resonate with the core thrust of the Black Arts Movement, one that sets black people in the center of their own cultural and political narratives, and inextricably bound to the wider movements of social justice in black communities.
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spelling doaj-art-8fb6f1c7c6ae4e2a9fce4abf1a27aef32025-01-06T09:08:57ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362019-04-0114110.4000/ejas.14366The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st CenturyJeffrey O.G. OgbarBeginning in the late 1960s, the Black Arts Movement grew as the cultural wing of the Black Power Movement. It was represented by a rich cross section of artistic work, often forged by young urban artists in genres as diverse as music, dance, visual arts, literature and theatre. No aesthetic was unaffected by inflections of this new black consciousness. This article explores the ways in which, a half-century after the Black Arts Movement, African Americans in television have cultivated an aesthetic and politics that resonate with the core thrust of the Black Arts Movement, one that sets black people in the center of their own cultural and political narratives, and inextricably bound to the wider movements of social justice in black communities.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/14366Black Lives MatterBlack Arts MovementBlack Power MovementTVArts
spellingShingle Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar
The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
European Journal of American Studies
Black Lives Matter
Black Arts Movement
Black Power Movement
TV
Arts
title The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
title_full The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
title_fullStr The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
title_full_unstemmed The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
title_short The Black Arts Movement Reprise: Television and Black Art in the 21st Century
title_sort black arts movement reprise television and black art in the 21st century
topic Black Lives Matter
Black Arts Movement
Black Power Movement
TV
Arts
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/14366
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