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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Title | Interview with Charlene Regester |
Library | Henry Hampton Collection, Film & Media Archive, Washington University Libraries |
Collection Name | Henry Hampton Collection |
Collection Overview | These oral history interviews are part of the 'I'll Make Me A World: African-American Artists in the 20th Century' collection, a celebration of some extraordinary achievements by African-American writers, dancers, painters, actors, musicians, and other influential artists of the 20th Century. |
Date | 19 Jan 1998 |
Description | Charlene Regester is Associate Professor of African and Afro-American Studies at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. In this interview, Regester discusses the significance of Oscar Micheaux in the history of American cinema. |
Document Type | Oral History (Video) |
Theme(s) | Arts and Culture; Poverty and Discrimination |
Keywords | racial tensions, Ku Klux Klan, segregation, womanhood, arts, culture |
Places | New York, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
People | Micheaux, Oscar; Lee, Spike; Robeson, Paul |
Note | Please note that some of the metadata for this document has been drawn from the catalogue of Washington University in St. Louis. |
Name | Regester, Charlene |
Interviewer | Pollard, Sam |
Date of Recording | 19 Jan 1998 |
Duration | 00:21:45 |
Copyright | Copyright is owned by Washington University |