Black Camera invites submissions for a Close-Up focused on Spike Lee’s
2018 film BlacKkKlansman. Lee delivered a provocative speech in front of the
2019 Academy Awards ceremony when winning the Oscar for best adapted
screenplay. Loosely based on Ron Stallworth’s recollections of his infiltration
into the Colorado Springs chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, BlacKkKlansman exploits
the paradoxical situation of its African American protagonist passing for a
white supremacist to integrate the Organization as a powerful source of humor
and critique. Spike Lee uses the narrative to trace the roots of the Trumpian
rhetoric in a history of nativist activism. In an interview with The New York
Times (Jan. 22, 2019), he declared: “And I feel that many years to come, when
historians search for a piece of art that clearly shows what is happening
today, BlacKkKlansman will be one of the first things they look at because this
film is on the right side of history.”
Like every Spike Lee Joint film, BlacKkKlansman is controversial and at
the epicenter of debates about cinema and politics. For example, the rapper,
filmmaker, and activist, Boots Riley (Sorry to Bother You, 2018), tweeted sarcastic
comments about the film’s sympathetic portrayal of the police.
BlacKkKlansman revisits and invites discussion about the enduring
influence of supremacist ideology in American political, social and cultural
life and Hollywood’s longstanding complicity in racism, sexism and patriarchy,
as the Me Too and Black Lives Matter movements substantiate.
We welcome for publication consideration, essays, commentary and
interviews exploring BlacKkKlansman from diverse disciplinary and analytical
perspectives.
Essays should not exceed 9,000 words.
Suggested topics include:
- screening the KKK in Hollywood fare [from The Birth of a Nation to BlacKkKlansman]
- adapting BlacKkKlansman from written text to screen
- historical re-enactments in BlacKkKlansman
- on Spike Lee’s cinematic style
- re-reading Spike Lee, then and now—Black auteur, Black independent?
- Spike Lee and Black cinema—negotiating the Hollywood divide
- a self-reflexive take on Black cinema
Please submit completed essays, a 150-word abstract, as well as a 50-100
word biography by June 7, 2020. Submissions should conform to the Chicago
Manual of Style, 16th edition. Please see journal guidelines for more on the
submission policy.
Direct all questions, correspondence, and submissions to guest editor
Delphine Letort at Delphine.Letort@univ-lemans.fr
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