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Jacqueline Bobo[edit]

Jacqueline Bobo is Chair and Associate Professor of Women's Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.[1] She got her undergraduate degree from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1971, her masters in 1980 at San Francisco State University ,and her Ph.D in film and television at the University of Oregon in 1989.

Early Life[edit]


Career[edit]

Jacqueline has worked on studying the response of Black women for films such as "Daughters of the Dust", "The Color Purple", and "Civil Brand". She interviewed a group of selected Black women and asked them how they felt about their protrayal in the 1985 film "The Color Purple" [2].

Works[edit]

'"The Subject is Money': Reconsidering the Black Film Audience as a Theoretical Paradigm" [3]

"Black feminism and media criticism: 'The Women of Brewster Place'" [4]

"Civil Brand (2002) and the Prison Industrial Complex" [5]

References[edit]


  1. ^ "Department of Feminine Studies". Feminist Studies University of California Santa Barbara.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Bobo, Jacqueline (Spring 1989). "Sifting Through the Controversy: Reading The Color Purple". Callaloo – via JSTOR.
  3. ^ Bobo, Jacqueline (Winter 2017). ""The Subject is Money": Reconsidering the Black Film Audience as a Theoretical Paradigm". African American Review. 50(4): pp.839-840. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  4. ^ Bobo, Jacqueline (Fall 1991). "Black feminism and media criticism: "The Women of Brewster Place"". Screen. 32(3): p.286 – via Oxford University Press Journals. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  5. ^ Bobo, Jacqueline (March 2018). "Civil Brand (2002) and the Prison Industrial Complex". Communication, Culture & Critique. 1(1): pp. 63-71 – via EBSCOhost Communication & Mass Media Complete. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)