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Black Film Center/Archive
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About Black Camera

Editor-in-Chief

Michael T. Martin

Managing Editor

Cole Nelson 

Assistant Editors

Allison J. Brown
Joseph E. Roskos
Ahmed Tahsin Shams
Justin Bonthuys

Film & Book Review Editor

David C. Wall

Advisory Editorial Board

Akin Adesokan, Indiana University, United States
Roy Armes, Middlesex University, United Kingdom (in memoriam)
Erna Beumers, Conservator Afrika, Netherlands
Beti Ellerson, Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema, France 
Eileen Julien, Indiana University, United States
Gaston Kabore, IMAGINE--Film Training Institute, Burkina Faso
Delphine Letort, University of Le Mans, France
Bruce Paddington, University of the West Indies at St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago
Lucia Saks, AFDA Cape Town, South Africa 
David C. Wall, Utah State University, United States
Lamont Yeakey, California State University, Los Angeles, United States

The Editor gratefully acknowledges the support for the publication of this journal by The Media School, Indiana University Bloomington.

Black Camera: An International Journal

An international scholarly film journal, Black Camera constitutes a platform for the study and documentation of the black cinematic experience in the world.

  • It privileges neglected and understudied sites of black filmmaking, and features essays that engage film in social as well as political contexts and in relation to historical and globalizing processes.
  • The journal includes interviews with emerging and prominent filmmakers, editorials, book and film reviews; documents archival notes and research reports; and addresses a wide range of genres—including documentary, experimental films, animation, musicals, and comedy.
  • The journal devotes issues or sections of issues to national cinemas as well as to independent, marginal, and oppositional films and other cinematic formations.
  • Our project is to document, encourage, and invigorate research and study of black filmmaking as an art form, cultural and political practice, and historical activity; engage in conversation with cinematic traditions, movements, and practices in world cinema; stimulate new, and refresh traditional, theoretical and analytical perspectives; privilege the study of new forms of cinematic practice and production; disseminate research to enhance the teaching of black film; and serve as a repository and showcase for black artistic and intellectual achievement.
  • Black Camera also constitutes a forum to debate and challenge received and ensconced views and assumptions about filmmaking in the African diaspora, where new, evolving, and long-standing cinematic formations and traditions are in play.
  • Our readership is you: scholar/researchers, media professionals and cineastes, and the public interested generally in cultural production and visual forms of representation.

Direct questions and submissions to Black Camera.

Direct questions about subscriptions to Indiana University Press (1-800-842-6796) or IUP Order.