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Scars of Conquest/Masks of Resistance: The Invention of Cultural Identities in African, African-American and Caribbean Drama [Mīkstie vāki]

(Assistant Professor of English, University of Viorginia)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, height x width x depth: 230x169x14 mm, weight: 327 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Aug-1995
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195094069
  • ISBN-13: 9780195094060
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 91,13 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, height x width x depth: 230x169x14 mm, weight: 327 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Aug-1995
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195094069
  • ISBN-13: 9780195094060
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This original work redefines and broadens our understanding of the drama of the English-speaking African diaspora. Looking closely at the work of Amiri Baraka, Nobel prize-winners Wole Soyinka and Derek Walcott, and Ntozake Shange, the author contends that the refashioning of the collective cultural self in black drama originates from the complex intersection of three discourses: Eurocentric, Afrocentric, and Post-Afrocentric.

From blackface minstrelsy to the Trinidad Carnival, from the Black Aesthetic to the South African Black Consciousness theatres and the scholarly debate on the (non)existence of African drama, Olaniyan cogently maps the terrains of a cultural struggle and underscores a peculiar situation in which the inferiorization of black performance forms is most often a shorthand for subordinating black culture and corporeality.

Drawing on insights from contemporary theory and cultural studies, and offering detailed readings of the above writers, Olaniyan shows how they occupy the interface between the Afrocentric and a liberating Post-Afrocentric space where black theatrical-cultural difference could be envisioned as a site of multiple articulations: race, class, gender, genre, and language.

Recenzijas

An excellent job and...a must for students of African Literature. * V.Y. Mudimbe, Duke University * This book is destined to elevate comparative research on African Diaspora drama out of the sub-basement of scholarship. Olaniyan literally performs this transformation by his choice of authors, carefull attention to texts, and criticism informed broadly by a rich dialogue among contemporary cultural and literary theorists.... The argument is presented forcfully, at times eloquently, with a turn of phrase likely to be quoted in the future by other scholars. * Ve Ve Clark, University of California, Berkeley * A long overdue and very successful comparaitve approach to several of the most important contemporary Black playwrights. Scars of Conquest/Masks of Resistance offers a fascinating, ambitious, and challenging reading of modern pan-African drama as a specific conceptual formation and cultural practice. Drawing on a variety of contemporary critical languages, but equally conversant in the contestatory idioms of Negritude writers, Fanon, and their inheritors, Olaniyan illuminates not only the convergence of competing discourses and historical pressures that helped shape a distinctive pan-African theater, but forces reconsideration of the drama's ambiguous" stagings of anticolonial and "post-Afrocentric" aspirations. Olaniyan's attention to subtle inflections of language and genre produce stimulating and persuasive readings of individual plays, and form the core of his vision of Black drama as an endless "reinvention" of postcolonial identities.. * Kimberly W. Benston, Haverford College * The publication of this book marks the emergence of a major new intellect in the field of post-colonial studies. * Abiola Irele, The Ohio State University, and Editor, Research in African Literatures. * An excellent job and...a must for students of African Literature. * V.Y. Mudimbe, Duke University. *

Introduction 3(8) I Contingent ``Origins Agones: The Constitution of a Practice 11(18) A Colonialist Discourse 12(6) A Counterhegemonic Discourse 18(8) A Post-Afrocentric Discourse 26(3) Difference, Differently 29(14) The Expressive and the Performative 30(5) Cultural Identity as Articulation 35(2) Genre 37(1) Language 38(5) II Inventing Cultural Identities ``Race Retrieval and Cultural Self-Apprehension 43(24) Wole Soyinka Assimilative Wisdom and Period Dialectics 45(4) History as Mythopoeic Resource 49(9) The Cultural, the Political 58(9) The Motion of History 67(26) LeRoi Jones Amiri Baraka The Violence of Naming 67(2) The Protean Esence 69(24) Islands of History at a Rendezvous with a Muse 93(23) Derek Walcot History as Culture: The Romance of Adam 97(7) Toward Inflammatory Dreams (for the New World Black) 104(5) Author as Text and Character 109(2) Coherent Deformation and Its Context 111(5) The Vengeance of Difference, or The Gender of Black Cultural Identity 116(23) Ntozake Shange Combat Breathing 120(8) A Layin on of Hands 128(11) Subjectivities and Institutions 139(4) Notes 143(28) Bibliography 171(20) Index 191