250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This collection fills a gap in the current literature in philosophy and film by focusing on the question: How would thinking in philosophy and film be transformed if race were formally incorporated moved from its margins to the center?

    The collection’s contributors anchor their discussions of race through considerations of specific films and television series, which serve as illustrative examples from which the essays’ theorizations are drawn. Inclusive and current in its selection of films and genres, the collection incorporates dramas, comedies, horror, and science fiction films (among other genres) into its discussions, as well as recent and popular titles of interest, such as Twilight, Avatar, Machete, True Blood, and The Matrix and The Help. The essays compel readers to think more deeply about the films they have seen and their experiences of these narratives.

    Introduction: Philosophical Approaches to Race in Film Dan Flory and Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo Epistemology 1. Imaginative Resistance and the White Gaze in Machete and The Help Dan Flory 2. Born into Bondage: Teaching The Matrix and Unlearning the Racial Organization of Knowledge Michael Eng 3. What's So Bad About Blackface? Christy Mag Uidhir Aesthetics 4. So Now You’re Swedish American?’: Jewish-American Women, Philosophies of Beauty in Requiem for a Dream Renée R. Curry and William Brigham 5.Cruising Through Race Monique Roelofs Moral Philosophy 6. True Blood and Race: From Progress to Complacency to Paganism, to Humanity Naomi Zack  7. Avatar: Racism and Prejudice on Pandora Michael P. Levine and Damian Cox  8. "Now, Imagine She's White": The Gift of the Black Gaze and the Re-Inscription of Whiteness as Normative in A Time to Kill George Yancy  Social and Political Philosophy 9. Race As/And (Ex)change: Trading Places and the Rise of Neo-Liberalism Charles W. Mills  10. Hardly Black and White: Racial and Sexual Stereotypes in Manderlay and Black Snake Moan Mélanie Walton  11. Elisions of Race and Stories of Progress: Planet 51 and The Princess and the Frog Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo and Carmen R. Lugo-Lugo Technology and the (Lived) Body 12.Vampires, Technology, and Racism: The Vampiric Image in Twilight and Let Me In Brian H. Onishi  13. Desperate Black Female: Sex and Race in Monster’s Ball Lucy Bolton

    Biography

    Mary K. Bloodsworth-Lugo is Professor of Critical Culture, Gender, and Race Studies at Washington State University, USA.

    Dan Flory is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Montana State University, USA.

    "This impressive collection of studies on diverse ways of thinking about race in film reflects a range of perspectives--from Fanon to Foucault, and Marx to analytic and feminist approaches. This volume should be a worthwhile addition to any collection featuring film studies." -C.D. Kay, Wofford College