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African Cinema: Manifesto and Practice for Cultural Decolonization : Volume 2: FESPACO-Formation, Evolution, Challenges

Brown, Allison J.(With)Nelson, Cole(With)Soma, Ardiouma(Preface by)Bangre, Sambolgo(Contributions by)Diawara, Manthia(Contributions by)Dovey, Lindiwe(Contributions by)Kabore, Gaston Jean-Marie(Contributions by)Wenner, Dorothee(Contributions by)Kabore, Gaston Jean-Marie(Edited by)Martin, Michael T.(Edited by)
Part of the Studies in the Cinema of the Black Diaspora series
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Challenging established views and assumptions about traditions and practices of filmmaking in the African diaspora, this three-volume set offers readers a researched critique on black film. Volume Two of this landmark series on African cinema is devoted to the decolonizing mediation of the Pan African Film & Television Festival of Ouagadougou (FESPACO), the most important, inclusive, and consequential cinematic convocation of its kind in the world.

Since its creation in 1969, FESPACO's mission is, in principle, remarkably unchanged: to unapologetically recover, chronicle, affirm, and reconstitute the representation of the African continent and its global diasporas of people, thereby enunciating in the cinematic, all manner of Pan-African identity, experience, and the futurity of the Black World.

This volume features historically significant and commissioned essays, commentaries, conversations, dossiers, and programmatic statements and manifestos that mark and elaborate the key moments in the evolution of FESPACO over the span of the past five decades.

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Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253066255 / 9780253066251
Paperback / softback
29/08/2023
United States
English
660 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour).
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