Black Taboo -1984- ✭

But for marginalized communities—particularly Black artists and thinkers in the US and UK— 1984 wasn't a distant fear; it was a lived reality. The "memory hole" of the state had been erasing Black history for centuries. Newspeak, Orwell’s language of control, found its real-world parallel in the coded language of Reaganomics and Thatcherism: "law and order" meant mass incarceration; "urban renewal" meant gentrification and displacement.

Academics have analyzed the film as a subversion of typical industry tropes, exploring how it uses "hyperbolic blackness" to parody racial stereotypes while focusing on Black female pleasure. A VHS copy of Black Taboo Black Taboo -1984-

Here is a deep dive into the film, its context, and its legacy. Academics have analyzed the film as a subversion

Basquiat was at the height of his powers in 1984. He painted Riding with Death and Profit I that year. These works directly violate the taboo of the era: they show a Black artist using white corporate imagery (the Amoco logo, the Sphinx) to depict capitalism as a cannibalistic, racist force. Basquiat was the high priest of the Black Taboo—he said on canvas what the world forbade him to say in interviews. He painted Riding with Death and Profit I that year

Nevertheless, the film’s release was met with protests from community groups who had not seen it but reacted to the title alone. In the summer of 1984, a Chicago video store owner was arrested for renting Black Taboo under local obscenity laws, specifically citing the title as evidence of "deviant content." The case was eventually dismissed, but the arrest created the exact notoriety the film needed. Overnight, Black Taboo -1984- became a must-see for the curious and the rebellious, not because of what it showed, but because someone had gone to jail for it.