'Always in Season' Explores the History of Lynching Through a Layered Lens

'"Experts don't really have a consensus on the definition of lynching, but generally it's agreed that a lynching occurs when three or more people gather for a public, racialized murder," filmmaker Jacqueline Olive told WNYC's cultural critic Rebecca Carroll, on the subject of her new documentary film, Always in Season. The film, which premiered at Sundance earlier this year and earned a special jury prize, uses the case of a Black teenage boy found hanging from a swing set in North Carolina as the catalyst to explore the layered history of lynching in America.' -- WNYC News
         
        
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Published on September 26, 2019 04:06
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