The BBC's Kentucky Minstrels, 1933-1950 : blackface entertainment on British radio / Michael Pickering
Material type: TextPublication details: Oxford : Journals Oxford, 1996.Description: illSubject(s): Content advice: This work contains material that readers may find offensive. The show was an exaggerated depiction of African Americans in the "good ole days" of plantation life in the U. S. South (Kentucky), accentuated with the use of stereotype racist and sexist humor. This article tackles the questions of racism and sexism in popular humour. The cultural transmission of prejudice in comic discourse and the analytical difficulties of dealing with offensive values within such discourse.Item type | Home library | Shelving location | Class number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Offprints and Photocopies | VWML | Pamphlet Box | MG 20.6 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Reference only | 17945 |
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This work contains material that readers may find offensive. The show was an exaggerated depiction of African Americans in the "good ole days" of plantation life in the U. S. South (Kentucky), accentuated with the use of stereotype racist and sexist humor. This article tackles the questions of racism and sexism in popular humour. The cultural transmission of prejudice in comic discourse and the analytical difficulties of dealing with offensive values within such discourse.
Original publication: Historical journal of film, radio and television, Vol. 16, part 2, 1996, p. 161-195.