Black American Gothic: Screening with Filmmakers


 Film and Media Studies     May 30 2013 | 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM McCormick Screening Room, Humanities Gateway 1070

Independent filmmaker Carla Wilson documents the exodus of Black people from
the inner-city, tracking folks from Chicago as they migrate west to small-town Iowa
City, where they struggle to establish roots. Echoing the early 20th-century Great
Migration of Blacks from southern states to the Northeast and Midwest, this new
migration is also about family-friendly housing, jobs, and the search for a better life.
So what does this national demographic trend look like on the ground? Iowa City is
a self-identified peaceful community now facing new challenges: supposedly safe
havens from urban life are increasingly attractive to the urban underclass, and as a
consequence, these receiving communities are compelled to redefine themselves
in terms of race, class, and the urban/ rural divide. By moving between narrated
experience and social scientific data, local and the national scenes, history and
immediacy, the documentary profiles a region in transition, providing public
administrators, teachers, and citizens new narratives for self-understanding and
action.

Awardee, "We the People" initiative, National Endowment for the Humanities

http://blackamericangothic.com/black_American_Gothic/Home.html

A Q&A will follow with filmmakers, Carla Wilson, Daniel Gross (UCI English) and
Tony Rasmussen (UCI music grad.). Prof. Bridget Cooks (Associate Professor in Art
History and African American Studies) will be the respondent and will talk a little
about the film before it is shown.