"Nicholas Sammond’s study provides a detailed, thoughtful, exhaustively researched examination of the process by which the early animation studios cast about for technical and semiotic models to inform their new art form and drew upon the complex and conflicted vocabulary of blackface minstrelsy to do so."
-- Christopher J. Smith Journal of American History
"Birth of an Industry is a welcome addition and valuable contribution to the ongoing academic discussion of the relationship of ethnic tensions to the art and business of animation."
-- Christopher P. Lehman African American Review
"Sammond's impressive Birth of an Industry condenses and stretches various links among the evolving art, labor, and business of early animated film."
-- T. Lindvall Choice
"Moving effortlessly among theories of comedy, critical race theory, performance studies, animation criticism, and both Marxist and Freudian analyses, Sammond has produced a comprehensive study of the rise of American animation."
-- Diego A. Millan Studies in American Humor
"Few authors . . . have proved minstrelsy's connections to early animation as carefully and convincingly as Nicholas Sammond in his thoughtful text Birth of an Industry."
-- Carmenita Higginbotham Journal of Southern History
"Sammond’s work in The Birth of An Industry is notable and fascinating. . . . By unpacking each component of the production and representation of minstrel animation, Sammond builds the space needed for an insightful discussion."
-- Niamh Timmons Journal of Popular Culture
"Birth of an Industry offers a timely, valuable, and theoretically distinguished intervention."
-- Malcolm Cook Animation
"With Birth of an Industry, Nicholas Sammond demonstrates that the specter of racialized caricature and its attending performative power dynamics have a longer and more pernicious continuum through which race, industry, and the nation understood and affected one another."
-- Allyson Nadia Field Media Industries