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Birth Of A Nation Analysis

Decent Essays

The film Birth of a Nation, released in 1915, was revolutionary in a technical and historical sense. It was the first American film to be 12 reels long, cost $100,000 dollars and is considered to be the first blockbuster. (Stokes 2008) The film was also an achievement in filmmaking as it provoked emotion and was very effective at conveying its message. The ideological message is the cause of controversy as it is focused on an inaccurate reimagining of African Americans, the KKK and the era of Reconstruction. The film did do a couple things right which was show how southern whites wanted to rewrite the history of reconstruction. Birth of a nation confirmed the story many whites wanted to tell which was to erase defeat and to take out of it a …show more content…

And while there is truth in that this was the way that Whites viewed African Americans, the film does a disservice by cementing the image of black people as animalistic. In fact every single image you see of a black person in the film is negative and demeaning. One of the worst images of African Americans in the film is the stereotype of the black criminal. The idea of black people as a threat is best shown through the character Gus, who stalks and eventually causes the suicide of a young white woman. And while the film seeks to confirm the image of African Americans as criminals, the real violence was caused by the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). In the movie, the KKK is inspired by white children pretending to be ghosts to scare black children. This plays to the stereotype of African Americans being very superstitious and frightened by ghosts and also masks the true intentions behind the Klan. Southern whites turned to violence in response to the revolutionary changes happening during this era and to restore white supremacy in the South. Towards the end of the film, the Klan is shown riding in to gain control of the town and

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