In what would be his final book project, Cedric Robinson takes a fine-grained analysis of early historical portrayals of Blacks in theater and film, examining the ways in which processes of racial mythmaking promulgated by popular media are inextricably tied to the key agents who benefit from the system of racial capitalism, the state and industry. Much like in Black Marxism, Robinson's historical overview is one of vast scope, and he situates the origins of the racial regimes of the United States in the racial regimes and projects of difference-making that dominated England before the "formal" origin of chattel slavery. This is just one of many interventions that Robinson makes into exposing the racial regime of the West, but more than anything, Robinson seeks to shine a light on the ordinary and extraordinary modes of resistance that Black performers were able to push for in the context of ever-more-violence regimes of racial mythmaking. Truly, this work contains more than I can describe in a few short sentences, and it is highly-recommended for anyone studying politics, race, gender, media, sex, history...pretty much everyone should read this book.