Lexington Books
Pages: 304
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-8093-8 • Hardback • February 2014 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7391-8094-5 • eBook • February 2014 • $135.50 • (£105.00)
Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike teaches in the Department of Communication and the Program in African and African Diaspora Studies at Tulane University. He is the author of Black African Cinema and Questioning African Cinema: Conversations with Filmmakers and theeditor of IRIS: A Journal of Theory on Image and Sound (Special Issue on African Cinema).
Introduction: Proliferating African Film Discourses
N. Frank Ukadike
Part One: Critical Perspectives
Chapter 1: Approaches to African Cinema Study: Defining Other Boundaries
Martin Mhando
Chapter 2: Theorizing African Cinema: Contemporary African Cinematic Discourse and its Discontents
Esiaba Irobi
Chapter 3: Tradition/Modernity and the Discourse of African Cinema
Jude Akudinobi
Part Two: History/Discourse and Intervention
Chapter 4: Queering African Film Aesthetics: A Survey from 1950s to 2003
Martin P. Botha
Chapter 5: African Cinemas and the Role of the State: The Cultural Imperialism Model
Roy Armes
Chapter 6: Transformation and South African Cinema in the 1990s
Keyan G. Tomaselli and Arnold Shepperson
Chapter 7: False Dawns Over the Kalahari? Botswana Cinema in Historical Perspective
Neil Parsons
Part Three: Pluralisms, Expressions, Traits: Reading the Text
Chapter 8: Chahine’s Cinematic Alexandria: Egyptian History and Cultural Identity
Suzanne H. MacRae
Chapter 9: Critical Dialogues: Transcultural Modernities and Modes of Narrating Africa in Documentary Films
N. Frank Ukadike
Chapter 10: Relational Constructs: Discourses of Gender in Taafe Fanga
Sheila Petty
Chapter 11: Reconsidering the Sembenian Project: Toward an Aesthetics of Change
Aboubakar S. Sanogo
Part Four: “Reel” Africanization
Chapter 12: Video Booms and the Manifestations of “First” Cinema in Anglophone Africa
N. Frank Ukadike
Chapter 13: We Can’t Wait for Oliver Stone: Interview with Eddie Ugbomah
N. Frank Ukadike
This anthology of important and provocative criticism by international authors is a welcome addition to African film studies. It offers an overview of Africa’s past and present cinematic output and explores themes, styles, politics, and socioeconomic issues. This collection challenges dominant modes of representation and scholarship and defines new paradigms of African film aesthetics. With this publication, and his previous articles and books, N. Frank Ukadike confirms his status as a keen observer and knowledgeable theoretician of African filmmaking.
— Francoise Pfaff, Howard University