The Black Stereotype Stereotypes

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There have been many twists and turns in the ways in which the black experience was represented in mainstream America cinema. But the repetition of stereotypical figures, drawn from ‘slavery days’ has never entirely disappeared (Hall, 1997). A Stereotype can be described as a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing (Oxford University Press, 2014) and can affect the target by getting hold of a few simple, vivid, memorable, easily grouped and widely recognised characteristic, about a person and reduce everything to the specific traits and exaggerate them (Hall, 1997). One of the most well-known stereotype has to be the ‘Black-stereotype’ which can be seen in all media productions ranging from news, film, music videos, reality television and other programming and forms of entertainment. Beginning around 1830, the history of African-Americans is a centuries old struggle against oppression and discrimination and because of these major issues, popular representations of racial ‘difference’ during slavery, has caused two main themes that are seen as blackface stereotypes today.
The first one is that all blacks contain a subordinate status of laziness and are naturally born to and are fitted for servitude and the second one is that they are reduced to the signifiers of their physical difference, such as thick lips, fuzzy hair and broad face and nose (Hall, 1997) as well as how they are just a tool used in ‘white’ entertainment. Soon stereotyping of blacks in popular representation became so common that cartoonists, illustrators and caricaturists would be able to create an entire gallery of ‘black types’ with just a few strokes of a pen (Hall, 1997). A world famous example would be ‘B...

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...f. Thomas Dunwitty, the white boss, relates to this stereotype since he is so blinded by the Blackface concept that he cannot see the fetishism happening around him and therefore becomes on object himself since he acts a switched role in the film.
During 1830 the start to this stereotype gained popularity between the 16th to 19th century and spread like wild-fire elsewhere, particularly in Britain. Blackface was an important performance tradition in the American theatre which presented the black as castrated, lacking, wounded and on object on display for the visual gratification of whites (Gubar, 1997). Therefore Halls views, on all four of his theories, are reinforced in the film Bamboozled and the film received very good reviews as it was seen as one of the most moving and eye-opening pieces of satire about Hollywood’s portrayal of African Americans till this day.

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