Dunn, Stephane. 2008. “Baad Bitches” and Sassy Supermamas: Black Power Action Films Chicago: University of Illinois Press
Morehouse College assistant professor of English Stephane Dunn blends personal narrative with critical theory in her book- a comprehensive assessment via feminist theory, racial and political commentary and literary analysis of blaxploitation films. Moreover, the films that Dunn chooses to critically analyze are those that feature African-American women in lead roles (i.e. Coffy, Foxy Brown, Cleopatra Jones) as well as films that deliberately have African-American women in the peripheral. These films, and the early blaxploitation actresses, according to Dunn, lay the foundation of modern portrayals of African-American woman in film as well as the hip-hop, “Generation X” women who readily identify with the strong, powerful, “badass” stereotypes that are often glorified. Furthermore, Dunn calls for a critical examination of these films beyond their status of “cult classics” as well as their impact on the modern African-American woman with regards to issues or race, gender, class and power/empowerment.
This book works extremely well by dealing with the intricate issues of race, sexuality, politics and gender within blaxploitation by applying historical analysis (i.e. reinforcing slave narratives in various films) in combination with modern interpretations and impacts of the genre on entertainment and society. Furthermore, issues specific to women (gender roles, rape, marginalization) are dealt with comprehensively. I believe because Dunn is of “Generation X” and has a familiarity with the genre and its impact; her personal tone and anecdotes work well as “openings” to her highly detailed, critical analysis chapters. The only negative is that Dunn tries to cover too many areas and often times certain passages lose their overall focus. Nevertheless, this is an extremely helpful resource written with a scholarly audience in mind.
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