Film and the History of Slavery

Teaching Hard History 2025 hero

Season 1: American Slavery

Episode 8: Film and the History of Slavery

Film has long shaped our nation’s historical memory — for good and bad. Film historian Ron Briley offers ways to responsibly use films in the classroom to more accurately frame the narrative of American slavery and Reconstruction.

Essential Ideas from this Episode

Movies can make the Black experience come alive, adding depth and dimension to the famous and the forgotten, to the extraordinary and the everyday. They can help us imagine the seemingly unimaginable, generating empathy by capturing and conveying deep emotion. 

  • Learning about American slavery can be emotional and complex, and film is a powerful medium for exploring this complex history.

A movie can be an engaging and invaluable visual literacy tool to learn about — or introduce — historical topics, both in formal and informal learning environments. 

  • By presenting a human face to historical events, film bridges the gap between facts and lived experience, and it can be an excellent tool for critical analysis.

However, while popular movies might be engaging ways to address a historical topic, they alone are not enough to understand and teach critically about hard history topics like American slavery. 

  • It is essential to pair movies with documentary films. Doing so provides critical background information and challenges the assumption that what appears on screen must be true. This happens when what is discussed in a documentary, such as women’s resistance to slavery, fails to show up in a movie about enslaved resistance. 

Film encourages audiences to consider the historical context in which a film was made by asking questions like, “How does a depiction of slavery onscreen compare to historical reality?” or “What does this tell us about the time period the film was made?” 

  • Ultimately, thoughtful analysis of what is on screen should help audiences answer and critique how a particular film helps us better understand American slavery.