Popular Culture in Africa

Popular Culture in Africa
Author: Stephanie Newell,Onookome Okome
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2013-11-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781135068936

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This volume marks the 25th anniversary of Karin Barber’s ground-breaking article, "Popular Arts in Africa", which stimulated new debates about African popular culture and its defining categories. Focusing on performances, audiences, social contexts and texts, contributors ask how African popular cultures contribute to the formation of an episteme. With chapters on theater, Nollywood films, blogging, and music and sports discourses, as well as on popular art forms, urban and youth cultures, and gender and sexuality, the book highlights the dynamism and complexity of contemporary popular cultures in sub-Saharan Africa. Focusing on the streets of Africa, especially city streets where different cultures and cultural personalities meet, the book asks how the category of "the people" is identified and interpreted by African culture-producers, politicians, religious leaders, and by "the people" themselves. The book offers a nuanced, strongly historicized perspective in which African popular cultures are regarded as vehicles through which we can document ordinary people’s vitality and responsiveness to political and social transformations.

Africans and the Politics of Popular Culture

Africans and the Politics of Popular Culture
Author: Toyin Falola,Augustine Agwuele
Publsiher: University Rochester Press
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2009
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781580463317

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Explores the instrumentalization of various aspects of popular culture in Africa.

A History of African Popular Culture

A History of African Popular Culture
Author: Karin Barber
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2018-01-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107016897

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A journey through the history of African popular culture from the seventeenth century to the present day.

Popular Culture in Africa

Popular Culture in Africa
Author: Stephanie Newell,Onookome Okome
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2013-11-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781135068943

Download Popular Culture in Africa Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume marks the 25th anniversary of Karin Barber’s ground-breaking article, "Popular Arts in Africa", which stimulated new debates about African popular culture and its defining categories. Focusing on performances, audiences, social contexts and texts, contributors ask how African popular cultures contribute to the formation of an episteme. With chapters on theater, Nollywood films, blogging, and music and sports discourses, as well as on popular art forms, urban and youth cultures, and gender and sexuality, the book highlights the dynamism and complexity of contemporary popular cultures in sub-Saharan Africa. Focusing on the streets of Africa, especially city streets where different cultures and cultural personalities meet, the book asks how the category of "the people" is identified and interpreted by African culture-producers, politicians, religious leaders, and by "the people" themselves. The book offers a nuanced, strongly historicized perspective in which African popular cultures are regarded as vehicles through which we can document ordinary people’s vitality and responsiveness to political and social transformations.

Youth and Popular Culture in Africa

Youth and Popular Culture in Africa
Author: Paul Ugor
Publsiher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 419
Release: 2021
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781648250248

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"The edited collection focuses on the links between young people and African popular culture. It explores popular culture produced and consumed by young people in contemporary Africa. And by "culture," we mean all kinds of texts or representations-visual, oral, written, performative, fictional, social, and virtual-created by African youth, mostly about their lives and their immediate societies, and for themselves, but also consumed by the larger public, and shared locally and globally. We proceed from the premise that cultural texts not only function as "social facts" as Karin Barber argues, but that they double as "commentaries upon, and interpretations of, social facts. They are part of social reality, but they also take up an attitude to social reality" (2007, 04). So, the work focuses specifically on what African youth produce as popular culture, under what conditions or contexts they produce such work, how they produce those texts, why they produce them, the aesthetic dimensions of these texts as cultural artifacts, and why these textual practices matter as social facts, as interpretive acts, and as cultural symbols of the general cultural activism of young people in a rapidly changing world, a world where the global cultural economy is the prime terrain for the relentless struggles over the meanings that come to shape political-economic and social systems"--

Popular Culture in the Middle East and North Africa

Popular Culture in the Middle East and North Africa
Author: Walid El Hamamsy,Mounira Soliman
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2013
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780415509725

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This book explores the current historical moment through works of popular culture produced in, and on, the Middle East and North Africa region, Turkey, and Iran. Essays consider gender, racial, political, and other issues in film, cartoons, talk shows, music, dance, blogs, graphic novels, fiction, fashion, and advertisements.

Routledge Handbook of African Popular Culture

Routledge Handbook of African Popular Culture
Author: Grace A Musila
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 606
Release: 2022-05-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781000588347

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This handbook brings together an international team of scholars from different disciplines to reflect on African popular cultural imaginaries. These imaginaries – in the sense of cultural productions, contexts, consumers, producers, platforms, and the material, affective and discursive resources they circulate – are influential in shaping African realities. Collectively, the chapters assembled in this handbook index the genres, methods, mediums, questions and encounters that preoccupy producers, consumers and scholars of African popular cultural forms across a range of geohistorical and temporal contexts. Drawing on forms such as newspaper columns, televised English Premier League football, speculative arts, romance fiction, comedy, cinema, music and digital genres, the contributors explore the possibilities and ambiguities unleashed by the production, circulation, consumption, remediation and critique of these forms. Among the questions explored across these essays are the freedoms and constraints of popular genres; the forms of self-making, pleasure and harm that these imaginaries enable; the negotiations of multiple moral regimes in everyday life; and, inevitably, the fecund terrain of contradictions definitive of many popular forms, which variously enable and undermine world-making. An authoritative scholarly resource on popular culture in Africa, this handbook is an essential read for students and scholars of African culture, society and media.

African Youth in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture

African Youth in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture
Author: Vivian Yenika-Agbaw,Lindah Mhando
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2014-01-21
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781134623938

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This book explores how African youth are depicted in contemporary literature and popular culture, and discusses the different ways by which they attempt to construct personal and cultural identities through popular culture and social media outlets. The contributors approach the subject from an interdisciplinary perspective, looking at images in children’s and adolescent literature from Africa, and the African diaspora, from Nollywood and Hollywood movies, from popular magazines, and from youth cultures encountered directly through field experiences. The findings reveal that there are many stereotypes about Africa, African youth and black cultures, and that African youth are aware of these. Since they juggle multiple identities shaped by their ethnicities, race and religion, it is often a challenge for them to define themselves. As they also share a global youth culture that transcends these cultural markers, some take advantage of media outlets to voice their concerns and participate in political struggles. Others simply use these to promote their personal interests. Contributors ponder the challenges involved in constructing unique identities, offering ideas on how African youth are doing so successfully or not in different parts of the continent and the African diaspora, and thus offer new possibilities for youth studies.