Space and Time in African Cinema and Cine-scapes
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:28th Jun '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book is the first of its kind to bring basic notions of contemporary physics to bear on African cine-scapes.
In this book, renowned African cinema scholar Kenneth W. Harrow presents unique new ways to think about space and time in film, with a specific focus on African and African diasporic cinema. Through a series of case studies, he explores how cinema creates and represents time and space and, more specifically, how a cinema centered in African landscapes and figures accomplishes this. He reflects on the issues and problems posed by scientists when faced with the basic questions of what space and time are and their solutions or conclusions, giving both film studies and African studies scholars access to new ways to formulate their thinking about African cine-scapes. Working beyond the limits of a framework based in a postcolonial and cultural understanding of time and space, Harrow demonstrates how a scientific understanding of time and space can open up new approaches to African cinema and cinema in general.
A unique, interdisciplinary book that encourages brand new ways to approach cinematic texts and, specifically, African cine-scapes.
"Kenneth Harrow’s book innovatively places science in conversation with African films. This pairing leads to the groundbreaking possibility that multiple kinds of time exist in and around the cinematic experience. From this hypothesis, Harrow reframes our relationship with cinema and moves the field of African cinema into much-needed new territory."
Vlad Dima, Professor & Chair, Department of African Cultural Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
ISBN: 9781032264707
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 453g
238 pages