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The history of early American cinema is not merely a history of technological innovation and artistic experimentation; it is also a history of ideology. The silver screen, from its earliest flickers, was not a blank slate but a potent tool for the projection, reinforcement, and occasional challenge of the nation’s deeply entrenched racial hierarchies. Long before D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915) codified a virulently racist vision for the medium, American films were busy crafting a visual language of stereotype that would have lasting consequences. To study this era is to confront an uncomfortable truth: the development of…
