
doi: 10.7227/jbr.3.10
The author reviews Raoul Peck’s 2016 film, I Am Not Your Negro, finding it a remarkable achievement as a documentary that breaks with cinematic conventions and emphasizes the importance of listening as much as looking. The director has singled out Baldwin as the writer whose work spoke most directly to his own identity and experience during his peripatetic childhood in Haiti and Africa, and in I Am Not Your Negro, Peck aims to ensure that Baldwin’s words will have a similar effect on audiences. However, even as it succeeds in reanimating Baldwin’s voice for a new political era, I Am Not Your Negro inadvertently exposes the difficulty of fully capturing or honoring the writer’s complex legacy. As scholars have long noted, interest in Baldwin’s life and work tends to divide along racial and sexual lines, and Peck’s documentary is no exception. The filmmaker privileges Baldwin’s blackness over his queerness by overlooking the parts of The Devil Finds Work and No Name in the Street in which the writer’s queerness figures prominently.
HT51-1595, American literature, I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck, The Devil Finds Work, James Baldwin, sexuality, blackness, queer, movies, PS1-3576, Communities. Classes. Races
HT51-1595, American literature, I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck, The Devil Finds Work, James Baldwin, sexuality, blackness, queer, movies, PS1-3576, Communities. Classes. Races
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