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"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”
– Nelson Mandela

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Weekly Session 9 (B)

Weekly Session 9 (B)

Q After reading and viewing the course materials for the 1990s, please discuss how your understanding of Black Images on Stage, Screen, and Television seemed to progress and / or stay the same compared to the 1980s. In your responses, please choose, identify, and explain specific examples of said images and how these images are reflective of the 1990s. Unfortunately, vague responses that do not respond to this prompt will not earn credit. Note: Please do not discuss the film Daughters of the Dust (1991) on this Discussion Board Forum. Students that do not honor this request will zero points for this Discussion Board Forum. Please respond with at least 100 words. Additionally, please respond to 2 peers' posts with at least 100 words for each post. FYI: Students can earn a maximum of 10 points per Discussion Board Forum. The grading point breakdown is as follows: 4 points- your initial post (at least 100 words) response this specific Discussion Board Forum prompt (Blank initial posts forfeit 4 points). 3 points- your 1st post (at least 100 words) to 1 peer's post that directly responds to this specific Discussion Board Forum topic + 3 points- your 2nd post (at least 100 words) to another peer's post that directly responds to this specific Discussion Board Forum topic. = 10 points for at least 300 words (as described above) for this specific Discussion Board Forum Thanks ? Important: Discussion Board Forum Grading Policies In order to earn credit for your work, Weekly Discussion Board responses / posts must fulfill the above criteria listed in the grade point breakdown. All posts that appear after the posted due date earn up to 50% credit. As this is a "post-first" Discussion Board Forum, a blank initial post forfeits 4 points.

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Black cinema in the 1990’s successfully brought out new stars and incorporated black recording artists into the film genre. It seems Hollywood was becoming less and less color conscience. In the first half of the 1990’s, Spike Lee, John Singleton, and Mario Van Peebles forced the issue of WEB DuBois’s four tenets of black film: by, for, about, and near us. Women started to participate, Leslie Harris, Julie Dash created great films. But these were all before 1996. The second half of the 1990s saw Hollywood fail to maintain a new generation of black genius.