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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