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The Elite Africa Database is a curated collection of resources for researchers interested in African elites. Search by keyword and filter your results by power domain, entry format, date, and other parameters.

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Jacqueline C Djedje

Professor, Ethnomusicology, Department of Ethnomusicology, UCLA

Email: djedje@ucla.edu

Djedje, Jacqueline C.

Professor, Ethnomusicology, Department of Ethnomusicology, UCLA

Aesthetic
Professional Contact
Professional Contact

Antoine A. Djogbenou

Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at York University

Email: daa@york.ca

Djogbenou Antoine A.

Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at York University

Economic
Professional Contact

Dovey Lindiwe

Professor, Film and screen studies, African studies

SOAS University of London

Email address:ld18@soas.ac.uk
Telephone:+44 (0)20 7898 4388
Address: SOAS University of London
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG
soas.ac.uk/staff/staff36139php

Dovey, Lindiwe

Professor, Film and screen studies, African studies, SOAS University of London

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Dovey, Lindiwe. African Film and Literature: Adapting Violence to the Screen. Film and Culture Series. New York: Columbia University Press, 2009.

Analyzing a range of South African and West African films inspired by African and non-African literature, Lindiwe Dovey identifies a specific trend in contemporary African filmmaking - one in which filmmakers are using the embodied audiovisual medium of film to offer a critique of physical and psychological violence. Against a detailed history of the medium’s savage introduction and exploitation by colonial powers in two very different African contexts, Dovey examines the complex ways in which African filmmakers are preserving, mediating, and critiquing their own cultures while seeking a united vision of the future. More than merely representing socio-cultural realities in Africa, these films engage with issues of colonialism and postcolonialism, "updating" both the history and the literature they adapt to address contemporary audiences in Africa and elsewhere. Through this deliberate and radical re-historicization of texts and realities, Dovey argues that African filmmakers have developed a method of filmmaking that is altogether distinct from European and American forms of adaptation.

[Source: Columbia University Press].

Dovey, Lindiwe. African Film and Literature

Dovey, Lindiwe
2009

Analyzing a range of South African and West African films inspired by African and non-African literature, Lindiwe Dovey identifies a specific trend in contemporary African filmmaking - one in which filmmakers are using the embodied audiovisual medium of film to offer a critique of physical and psychological violence.

Aesthetic
Bibliographic

Dovey, Lindiwe. Curating Africa in the Age of Film Festivals. Framing Film Festivals. New York, N.Y: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137404145.

Tracing the history of Africa’s relationship to film festivals and exploring the festivals’ impact on the various types of people who attend festivals (the festival experts, the ordinary festival audiences, and the filmmakers), Dovey reveals what turns something called a "festival" into a "festival experience" for these groups.

[Source: Springer].

Dovey, Lindiwe. Curating Africa in the Age of Film Festivals

Dovey, Lindiwe
2015

Tracing the history of Africa’s relationship to film festivals and exploring the festivals’ impact on the various types of people who attend festivals (the festival experts, the ordinary festival audiences, and the filmmakers), Dovey reveals what turns something called a "festival" into a "festival experience" for these groups.

Aesthetic
Bibliographic

Prosper Dovonon

Full Professor, Department of Economics, Concordia University

Email: prosper.dovonon@concordia.ca
Webpage: sites.google.com/site/prosperdovonon

Dovonon Prosper

Full Professor, Department of Economics, Concordia University

Economic
Professional Contact

Down river road

Print journal for fiction, nonfiction and Poetry

Kenya

https://downriverroad.org/

Description:

Down River Road is an online and print journal that publishes fiction, nonfiction, poetry and ideas. It is interested in the margins, in the shifting centres and the new spaces that exist in what is called the alternative.

Down River Road

Down river road, Kenya

Aesthetic
Organization
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