That's Enough, Folks

That's Enough, Folks Black Images in Animated Cartoons, 1900-1960

Hardback (25 Jun 1998)

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Publisher's Synopsis

An authoritative and valuable resource for students and scholars of film animation and African-American history, film buffs, and casual readers. It is the first and only book to detail the history of black images in animated cartoons. Using advertisements, quotes from producers, newspaper reviews, and other sources, Sampson traces stereotypical black images through their transition from the first newspaper comic strips in the late 1890s, to their inclusion in the first silent theatrical cartoons, through the peak of their popularity in 1930s musical cartoons, to their gradual decline in the 1960s. He provides detailed storylines with dialogue, revealing the extensive use of negative caricatures of African Americans. Sampson devotes chapters to cartoon series starring black characters; cartoons burlesquing life on the old slave plantation with "happy" slaves Uncle Tom and Topsy; depictions of the African safari that include the white hunter, his devoted servant, and bloodthirsty black cannibals; and cartoons featuring the music and the widely popular entertainment style of famous 1930s black stars including Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong, and Fats Waller. That's Enough Folks includes many rare, previously unpublished illustrations and original animation stills and an appendix listing cartoon titles with black characters along with brief descriptions of gags in these cartoons.

Book information

ISBN: 9780810832503
Publisher: Scarecrow Press
Imprint: The Scarecrow Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 791.436520396073
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 249
Weight: 993g
Height: 287mm
Width: 221mm
Spine width: 22mm