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African Performance Arts and Political Acts
Naomi André, Yolanda Covington-Ward, and Jendele Hungbo, Editors
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African Performance Arts and Political Actspresents innovative formulations for how African performance and the arts shape the narratives of cultural history and politics. This collection, edited by Naomi André, Yolanda Covington-Ward, and Jendele Hungbo, engages with a breadth of African countries and art forms, bringing together speech, hip hop, religious healing and gesture, theater and social justice, opera, radio announcements, protest songs, and migrant workers' dances. The spaces include village communities, city landscapes, prisons, urban hostels, Township theaters, opera houses, and broadcasts through the airwaves on television and radio as well as in cyberspace. Essays focus on case studies from Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania.
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Play of Social and Political Roles in Everyday Life
Performing Political Identities
The Socio-poetics of Sanakuyaagal
Participation beyond Gratitude
Expressions of Identity, Consciousness, and Migration
The Phenomenology of Collapsing Worlds
African Heritage Revealed through Musical Encounters and Political Ideologies
Discussing the Play Angalia Ni Mimi! and a Performance by the Playwright Marthe Djilo Kamga (Cameroon)
Angalia Ni Mimi!
Gendered Messages of Social Change
Surviving Gender Violence
Gangsters, Masculinity, and Ethics
Songs of Protest and Activist Opera
Seditious Songs
Activist Operatic Spaces Depicting Reality
The Intrinsic Power of Songs Sung During Protests at South African Institutions of Higher Learning (South Africa)