Art and Trauma in Africa
Representations of Reconciliation in Music, Visual Arts, Literature and Film
Stefanie Van de Peer editor Lizelle Bisschoff editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:27th Feb '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The traumas of conflict in postcolonial Africa have been widely documented, but less well-known are their artistic representations. A number of recent art forms have engaged with and overcome post-colonial atrocities and explored the attempts of reconciliation commissions to engage with the traumatic memories shared by African and global audiences.
The traumas of conflict and war in postcolonial Africa have been widely documented, but less well known are their artistic representations. A number of recent films, novels and other art forms have sought to engage with and overcome postcolonial atrocities and to explore the attempts of reconciliation commissions towards peace, justice and forgiveness. This creativity reflects the memories and social identities of the artists, whilst offering a mirror to African and worldwide audiences coming to terms with a collective memory that is often traumatic in itself. The seeming paradox between creative representation and the reality of horrific events such as genocide presents challenges for the relationship between ethics, poetics and politics. In Art and Trauma in Africa, Lizelle Bisschoff and Stefanie Van de Peer bring together multiple ways of analyzing the ethical responsibility at the heart of an artist's decision to tackle such controversial and painful subjects. Also, to study trauma, conflict and reconciliation through art in a pan-African context offers new perspectives on a continent that is often misrepresented by the Western media. The inexpressible nature of atrocities that are the crux of how Africa is generally regarded from the outside is challenged with new art forms that in and of themselves question perception and interpretation. African artists are renewing the field of trauma studies through representing the unrepresentable in order to incessantly invigorate insights and theories. Art and Trauma in Africa examines a diverse range of art forms, from hip hop in Nigeria and dance in Angola to Moroccan films and South African literature, taking an original pan-African approach. It is in doing so that this groundbreaking volume will inspire those interested in African history and politics as well as those with an interest in trauma, cultural and artistic studies.
'Art and Trauma in Africa is an illuminating volume, full of insightful and thought-provoking contributions on the representation of reconciliation in music, visual arts, literature and film. A timely, evocative and engaging book, which is made up of a wide range of well-selected case studies: from music, sculptures and photographs, to stories, documentaries and films. This book sheds fresh light onto old conflicts and the role of the arts in Africa on the long, and often complicated, road towards reconciliation.' Jolyon Mitchell, Professor of Communications, Arts and Religion, University of Edinburgh. His most recent book is Promoting Peace, Inciting Violence: The Role of Religion and Media (2012) 'Bisschoff and Van de Peer are to be congratulated on bringing together a particularly timely volume, which will provide a valuable and accessible resource for students of trauma studies, reconciliation and peace studies, and African studies. At the same time as drawing to attention the diversity and complexity of conflict situations in Africa, this book also provides testament to the remarkable range of artistic responses that have emerged in post-conflict nations and communities. It provides a powerful and nuanced argument for the potential of creative practice to stimulate a number of empathetic connections, which in turn underpin broader processes of social and political reconciliation.' Anne Whitehead, Senior Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature, School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics, Newcastle University
ISBN: 9781848856929
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 562g
360 pages