The growing scholarship of film censorship in America, and particularly, in the Jim Crow South sheds important light on the complex relationship between governance and popular culture. Melissa Ooten’s thorough study, Race, Gender, and Film Censorship in Virginia, 1922– 1965, is a welcome addition. . . .She convincingly argues that issues regarding not only race but also gender, sexuality, and class informed Virginia’s movie censorship. . . .Ooten’s examination of how discourses of race and gender informed Virginia’s censorship board is a vital contribution to understanding cinema and its exhibition in the Jim Crow South.