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Periodical article Periodical article Leiden University catalogue Leiden University catalogue WorldCat catalogue WorldCat
Title:Practising 'democracy' in Nigerian films
Author:Adesokan, AkinISNI
Year:2009
Periodical:African Affairs: The Journal of the Royal African Society
Volume:108
Issue:433
Pages:599-619
Language:English
Geographic term:Nigeria
Subjects:cinema
democracy
External link:https://www.jstor.org/stable/40388422
Abstract:This article discusses the response of 'Nollywood' to the transformation of Nigeria's social structure through the economic and political regimes of global neoliberalism and Nigeria's military rule, and the aesthetic possibilities enabled by video and digital technologies. Approaching Nollywood as a new cinematic form which results from the collapse of the middle classes due to radical economic reforms, the article looks at two films, 'Akobi Gomina' (The Governor's Heir, 2002) and 'Agogo Eewo' (The Sacred Gong, 2002) to demonstrate the implications of this phenomenon in the changing sociopolitical structure crystallized with the advent of the Fourth Republic in 1999. In these works of explicit and oblique political commentary, which present us with intimations of the genre of 'democracy films', the idea of a public receptive to mutually recognized cultural or personal symbols is used to develop new aesthetic modes in films. But these filmmaking practices also circumscribe the possibilities of an ideologically progressive cinematic practice. Thus, a form originating partly from an economic context appears caught in an aesthetic impasse, but the article suggests that the tendency in Nollywood toward generic proliferation might represent one path out of the impasse. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]
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