Clyde Taylor, a scholar who in the 1970s and ’80s played a leading role in identifying, defining and elevating Black cinema as an art form, died on Jan. 24 at his home in Los Angeles.
His daughter, Rahdi Taylor, a filmmaker, said the cause was chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
As a young professor in the Los Angeles area in the late 1960s — first at California State University, Long Beach, and then at the University of California, Los Angeles — Dr. Taylor was at the epicenter of a push to bring the study of Black culture into academia.
Black culture was not merely an appendage to white culture, he argued, but had its own logic, history and dynamics that grew out of the Black Power and Pan-African movements.
And filmmaking, he said, was just as important to Black culture as literature and art.
Persons:
Clyde Taylor, Rahdi Taylor, —, Dr, Taylor
Organizations:
California State University, University of California, Black Power
Locations:
Los Angeles, Long Beach