Font Size: a A A

Africanicity in black cinema: A horizontal labyrinth of trans -geographical practices of identity

Posted on:2005-08-07Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Concordia University (Canada)Candidate:Boulou Ebanda, de B'beriFull Text:PDF
GTID:1455390008489505Subject:Mass Communications
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
This dissertation examines the role of cinema as a conduit of black expressions of identity. It finds that since its inception, cinema has played an important part in generating, on the one hand, imaginary significations about black peoples, and, on the other hand; imaginative signifying(s) harmonized with black expressions of identity.;This dissertation reviews the categories of cultural and-political identity in order to discern the reenacted practices of expression linking the socio-historical experience of black peoples to trans-geographical expressions of identity in film. It concludes that specific paradigms of communication, such as 'affectivity' and 'resilience,' determine the ways in which some black people articulate their practices of identity through the medium of cinema. Examination of these paradigms as discursive practices of 'detournement' or ' marronage' allows us to understand the more complex effects of Africanicity as a necessary reenactment and articulation of their social, cultural, and historical experiences.
Keywords/Search Tags:Black, Identity, Cinema, Practices
PDF Full Text Request
Related items