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Sounder Lobby Card 1 (1972)

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@ Washington University in Saint Louis

Radnitz/Mattel Productions

Description

Set in 1933 during The Great Depression, the characters in Sounder are integrated within the natural and social landscape of a time when many Americans experienced poverty and hopelessness. To promote the film, lobby cards provided audiences with a scene from the movie in which David Lee and his father Nathan Lee are talking to one another during a day of hard work. The barren and harsh landscape in front of a deteriorating home illustrates the political and social position of many poor families of the time. The historical silences imposed on marginalized families during the Great Depression gives Sounder a place to narrate the terror and survival of a family burdened by racism and lack of political regard. Sounder, set in the time before the mass exodus of African Americans to cities in the North and Midwest, shows the adolescent David Lee on a precipice, standing with his father in the Jim Crow era South as he is forced to seek a different life for himself. David Lee, the eldest son of the Morgan family, matures once he recognizes the suffocating social space he is allocated within his own community: he comes to understands the racism of white citizens and how education is a luxury. 201341983":0,"335559731":720,"335559740":276}"> It is important to understand how the visual culture of the Great Depression is often focused on rural white Americans or jobless European immigrants in urban settings, instead of African Americans (Nelson). Before the economic collapse, the Great Depression began as an agricultural crisis in the American South. The diminishing value of...
Format:
Photograph
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
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Record Contributed By

Washington University in Saint Louis

Record Harvested From

Missouri Hub