With open eyes : : women and African cinema / / edited by Kenneth W. Harrow.
Matatu is a journal on African literatures and societies dedicated to interdisciplinary dialogue between literary and cultural studies, historiography, the social sciences and cultural anthropology. Matatu is animated by a lively interest in African culture and literature (including the Afro-Caribbe...
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Superior document: | Matatu Series ; v.19 |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Amsterdam : : Brill Academic Publishers,, 2023. |
Year of Publication: | 2023 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Matatu Series
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (xii, 263 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- A Problematic Sign of African Difference in Trinh T. Minh-ha's Reassemblage
- The Mature and Older Women of African Film
- The Female Body as Symbol of Change and Dichotomy: Conflicting Paradigms in the Representation of Women in African Film
- Three Poems from The Cows of Shambat
- The Locus of Tension: Gender in Algerian Cinema
- Women in Igbo-Language Videos: The Virtuous and the Villainous
- Interview with Anne Mungai
- Nouveau regard, nouvelle parole: le cinéma d'Assia Djebar
- Visages de Femmes: Finzan et Les Soleils des Indépendances
- The Unreal But Visible Line: Difference and Desire for the Other in Chocolat
- Women with Open Eyes, Women of Stone and Hammers: Western Feminism and African Feminist Filmmaking Practice
- Interview with Med Hondo
- Three Poems from Poèmes de la Mer /Poems of the Sea
- Sub-Saharan African Women Filmmakers: Agendas for Research with a Filmography
- Women in African Cinema: An Annotated Bibliography
- In memoriam
- Interview with Amryl Johnson (with an appendix on her publications)
- Nadine Gordimer: Writing and Being. The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures, 1994.1 (Cambridge, Mass.; London: Harvard University Press, 1995)
- African Literature Today 20: New Trends and Generations in African Literature, eds. Eldred Durosimi Jones and Marjorie Jones. (London: James Currey; Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1996)
- Mineke Schipper: Source of All Evil: African Proverbs and Sayings on Women. (Nairobi: Phoenix Publishers, 1991.)
- Manfred F. Prinz: Die kulturtragenden lnstitutionen Senegals. Zwischen kolonialem Erbe und Unabhlingigkeit. [Sozialwissenschaftliche Studien zu internationalen Problemen / Social Science Studies on International Problems; 172]. (SaarbrUcken, Fort Lauderdale: Breitenbach, 1993).
- David Kerr: African Popular Theatrefrom Pre-colonial Times to the Present Day. [Studies in African Literature. New Series] (London: James Currey; Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann; Nairobi:.East African Educational Publishers; Harare: Baobab; Cape Town: David Philip, 1995)
- Jana Gohrisch. (Un)Belonging? Geschlecht, Klasse, Rasse und Ethnizitlit in der britischen Gegenwartsliteratur: Joan Rileys Romane. Europaische HochschulschriftenlEuropean University Studies, 14; 276. (FrankfurtIMain: Peter Lang, 1994)
- Author's Addresses.