Remediation is a noted phenomenon in cinema studies. How it operates in African films has been less parsed. This article examines Abderrahmane Sissako’s La vie sur Terre (1998) and Ousmane Sembène’s Moolaadé (2004), two films with distinct approaches to the remediation of radio. I argue that postcolonial African media contexts, where national cinemas struggle (Nollywood excepted) and radio thrives, compel us to read remediation’s tensions as locally rendered and politically charged. As these media interact on film they pose questions about visuality, sound, and broadcasting that fortify the film narratives and challenge media ideologies of the continent
How do African cultures transform when they appropriate new media? This introduction to the followin...
The social spaces of remediation. Congolese urban dance music in late postcolonial KinshasaFollowing...
This article explores re-mediations of non-fiction through an examination of so-called animated docu...
AFRICAN CINEMA: ADDRESSEE UNKNOWN Thirty years after Sembene's pioneering Borom Sarret, this is a mo...
Many analyses of media in Africa and elsewhere have emphasized the change in the relation between pr...
This article explores the relationships between African filmmakers and communism during the Cold War...
peer reviewedDespite the complexity and dynamism of African media industries, the study of African r...
This study focuses on the relationship between African cinema and colonialism and postcolonial disco...
Critical discussion of Abderrahmane Sissako's major films, Life on Earth (1998), Waiting for Happine...
Radio is the new medium of the 20th century, reinvented over again as new information and communicat...
Western media has consistently misrepresented or underrepresented African people and cultures. This ...
The subject of this study is Sub-Sahara Africa Anglophone Video-moviemaking and the research process...
Throughout history, communication and information culture have remained a powerful means of dissemin...
When Tommy Lott advanced his ‘no-theory theory’ on the definition of black cinema, he argued that a ...
The last two decades in Africa have yielded a significant crop of films devoted primarily to a criti...
How do African cultures transform when they appropriate new media? This introduction to the followin...
The social spaces of remediation. Congolese urban dance music in late postcolonial KinshasaFollowing...
This article explores re-mediations of non-fiction through an examination of so-called animated docu...
AFRICAN CINEMA: ADDRESSEE UNKNOWN Thirty years after Sembene's pioneering Borom Sarret, this is a mo...
Many analyses of media in Africa and elsewhere have emphasized the change in the relation between pr...
This article explores the relationships between African filmmakers and communism during the Cold War...
peer reviewedDespite the complexity and dynamism of African media industries, the study of African r...
This study focuses on the relationship between African cinema and colonialism and postcolonial disco...
Critical discussion of Abderrahmane Sissako's major films, Life on Earth (1998), Waiting for Happine...
Radio is the new medium of the 20th century, reinvented over again as new information and communicat...
Western media has consistently misrepresented or underrepresented African people and cultures. This ...
The subject of this study is Sub-Sahara Africa Anglophone Video-moviemaking and the research process...
Throughout history, communication and information culture have remained a powerful means of dissemin...
When Tommy Lott advanced his ‘no-theory theory’ on the definition of black cinema, he argued that a ...
The last two decades in Africa have yielded a significant crop of films devoted primarily to a criti...
How do African cultures transform when they appropriate new media? This introduction to the followin...
The social spaces of remediation. Congolese urban dance music in late postcolonial KinshasaFollowing...
This article explores re-mediations of non-fiction through an examination of so-called animated docu...