[In honor of Martin
Luther King Jr. Day, this week’s series has focused on histories and
stories salient to understanding and engaging with the life and legacy of one
of our greatest Americans. For this crowd-sourced post, I decided to highlight
a few of the many wonderful pieces that have been written about and in response
to the film Selma—add your thoughts
or reviews, please!]
I’ll start by highlighting
one more time my
Talking Points Memo piece from this past Monday.
Wesley Morris’s
review of the film on Grantland was very much in the same vein as my
thoughts.
As with this great Amy Davidson piece in The New Yorker.
As with this great Amy Davidson piece in The New Yorker.
The inspiring John
Lewis wrote an op ed sharing his own thoughts on both the film and the
histories it captures.
Public historian
and scholar Devin
Hunter wrote some first thoughts on the film here.
Lonnie Bunch,
director of the African American History Museum, had this
perspective on the film.
Scholar
Brittney Cooper wrote a great piece for Salon.com on the LBJ controversy.
Film critic and
historian Robert
Jones, Jr. wrote an open letter to the film’s director, Ava DuVernay.
DuVernay
screened and discussed the film (with the help of Henry Louis Gates, Jr.)
here in Somerville.
The New Yorker published this wonderful portfolio
of Selma pictures.
And We’re History
published this piece by co-editor David Chappell on the past and present
debates over the MLK holiday and the many historical and contemporary issues to
which it connets.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other responses or connections you’d add?
PS. It's time-sensitive, but gonna add Matt Zoller Seitz's amazing series of Saturday 1/24 Tweets to this list: https://twitter.com/mattzollerseitz
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