From Sundance to suspect: a rhetorical analysis of the Nate Parker controversy

Date

2017-08-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

Artists influence society. We also often consider the question of whether we can or should separate the art and the artist. In January 2016 The Birth of a Nation premiered at the Sundance Film Festival to near unanimous praise. Shortly after the release, past allegations of sexual assault against the filmmaker, co-writer, and star Nate Parker’s past came to light. This revelation about his past continues a long and unfortunate history of artists who have completed culturally relevant works but who have been morally suspect human beings. I therefore explore how communities reconcile and support an artist accused of reprehensible acts or how they condemn the artist and reject support for them or their work. I find that commentators who engage in this controversy call forth specific communities. These communities are bound by their identities, and I suggest how they potentially are able to move forward, grow, and possibly come together across lines that include gender, race, ideology, social status, and personal identity and how they communicate and grow as individuals. Through revised discourse, these communities may be able to one day communicate across cultural lines that are currently deep chasms, separated by ideology and identity.

Description

Keywords

Race, Gender, Identity, Ideology, Cross-cultural communication

Graduation Month

August

Degree

Master of Arts

Department

Department of Communications Studies

Major Professor

Colene J. Lind

Date

2017

Type

Thesis

Citation