Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Fake Indian: Why America Bought a White Supremacist’s Native American "Memoir"

The Estep was packed when director Marco Ricci, producer Douglas Newman, and executive producer Dr. Laura Browder flew in from New York, Houston, and Richmond, Virginia, respectively to screen their film The Reconstruction of Asa Carter.  The 2010 documentary dramatizes the story of Asa Earl Carter, a white supremacist who wrote speeches for Alabama governor George Wallace and later published a bestselling "nonfiction memoir," The Education of Little Tree (1976).  Though the "memoir" was later exposed as a complete hoax, it was later made into a feature film and still gets taught in some college literature courses that focus on ethnic literature.

After the screening, the filmmakers participated in a lively, hour-long question-and-answer session focusing on the history of race hatred in America, the performance of ethnic identity, and the kinds of truth you can expect to find in fiction and film.
No seat? No problem. I'm NOT missing this!
Eager throngs pack the Estep Auditorium for a chance to watch the documentary The Reconstruction of Asa Carter
and take part in a Q&A session with the director and producers of the film.
Look mom! I'm taking pictures with CELEBRITIES.
After the film screening and Q&A session, a few lucky Honors students got to pose for a picture with the film's director and producers and then join them for dinner. Can you pick the three  filmmakers out of this lineup?   How about Honors students Derek Reed, Meagon Eagon, Marissa Hinton and Jaime Worden?



"Fake Indian: Why America Bought a White Supremacist’s Native American 'Memoir'" was paid for in part by a generous grant from the Hayes Native American Center.  Additional funding provided by The Oklahoma Humanities Council, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the ECU Foundation.

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