/tmp/gtvot.jpg William Monroe Trotter – Woodrow Wilson Debate on Segregation – Hidden History of Hollywood

“Only the colored people themselves can determine their political, social and economic future.”

William Monroe Trotter

Prof. EA Kiss

This course surveys a hidden canon of African American film while also uncovers the roots of representational injustice in Hollywood and the secret, but cardinal role Woodrow Wilson played in the production and distribution of Griffith’s “The Birth of a Nation” that led to the rebirth of the KKK. Wilson’s policy of segregation was adapted by Hollywood as a self-censoring industry regulation of representation. Black people could only appear on screen as subservient and marginal characters, never as equals, partners or leaders. This industry code, Wilson’s legacy, has become second nature to Hollywood.

William Monroe Trotter – Woodrow Wilson Debate on Segregation

Alison Hirsch

2021, storyboard

“Think this seems too ridiculous to be true? Click here to see a transcript published by Princeton Graduate Student Christine Lunardini.”
Lunardini, Christine A. “Standing Firm: William Monroe Trotter's Meetings With Woodrow Wilson, 1913-1914.” The Journal of Negro History, vol. 64, no. 3, 1979, pp. 244–264.