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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Clark Abstract

This paper examines the power of the film archive as both a record of the civil rights movement and a tool in that struggle. The launch of All-American News and the release of The Negro Soldier during World War II, spoke to the significance of archival footage as visual evidence of African American contributions to the war effort. The use and re-use of newsfilm in sweeping civil rights documentaries like Eyes on the Prize and King: A Filmed Record demonstrates the mobilizing potential and historical resonance of such images. By making this footage available to scholars, students, and documentarians, the Accessible Civil Rights Newsfilm Collection continues this tradition. Tracing the afterlives of specific footage and the filmic genealogies of compilation documentaries can help make important connections across time, affirming the lasting historical potency of the indexical image and recognizing the influence—sometimes posthumous—of Black filmmakers and civil rights activists.

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