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Hollywood and Africa - recycling the ¿Dark Continent¿ myth from 1908¿2020 is a study of over a century of stereotypical Hollywood film productions about Africa. It argues that the myth of the Dark Continent continues to influence Western cultural productions about Africa as a cognitive-based system of knowledge, especially in history, literature and film. Hollywood and Africa identifies the ¿colonial mastertext¿ of the Dark Continent mythos by providing a historiographic genealogy and context for the term¿s development and consolidation. An array of literary and paraliterary film adaptation…mehr
Hollywood and Africa - recycling the ¿Dark Continent¿ myth from 1908¿2020 is a study of over a century of stereotypical Hollywood film productions about Africa. It argues that the myth of the Dark Continent continues to influence Western cultural productions about Africa as a cognitive-based system of knowledge, especially in history, literature and film. Hollywood and Africa identifies the ¿colonial mastertext¿ of the Dark Continent mythos by providing a historiographic genealogy and context for the term¿s development and consolidation. An array of literary and paraliterary film adaptation theories are employed to analyse the deep genetic strands of Hollywood¿Africa film adaptations. The mutations of the Dark Continent mythos across time and space are then tracked through the classical, neoclassical and new wave Hollywood¿Africa phases in order to illustrate how Hollywood productions about Africa recycle, revise, reframe, reinforce, transpose, interrogate ¿ and even critique ¿ these tropes of Darkest Africa while sustaining the colonial mastertext and rising cyberactivism against Hollywood¿s whitewashing of African history.
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Autorenporträt
Okaka Opio Dokotum is an associate professor of literature and film and deputy vice-chancellor (Academic Affairs) at Lira University in Uganda. An eclectic multidisciplinary researcher, Dokotum has published extensively in the fields of literature-film adaptation theory, trauma cinema and aesthetics, performative poetics, music video aesthetics, visual history, heritage studies and Ugandan literature. He is a playwright, poet and filmmaker, and has adapted his play Wek Abonyo Kwani ['Let Abonyo Study'] (2003) into the first feature film in Lëblango/Lwo. Four of his plays and a poetry anthology in L¿blango are taught at secondary school and university levels in Uganda. He is a columnist for Rupiny, a Ugandan Lwo weekly, and serves on the jury of the Uganda Film Festival.
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