In cinema, even before questions about racial bias and colourism in the industry and its narratives are raised, it is the racism inherent to film technology itself that alarms film historians. Scholars like Richard Dyer and Brian Winston critique the racial affinities of the film apparatus when it represents and images 바카라black subjects바카라. They point out that the light sensitivity of film stocks were calibrated and tuned with light skin tones as the norm, rendering dark skin tones outside their 바카라pur-view바카라. Dyer says motion picture lighting technology and approaches to illuminating human figures assume and thus impose a 바카라special affinity between (whites) and light바카라. The 바카라Shirley cards바카라 that photographers used as the standard for skin tones and light featured only Caucasian models. Obviously, non-white skins did not 바카라figure바카라 in the colour palette of photography and cinema until recently. So, in the republic of cinema, shaped by such technological biases and ruled by racial prejudices, the only rightful subjects were the white.