African Media in an Age of Extraction
Title
African Media in an Age of Extraction
Subtitle
Nollywood Geographies
Price
€ 153,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789048561254
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
360
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 0,00
Table of Contents
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Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Nollywood’s Spatial Frames
Chapter 1: Resource Cinemas: Sites, Symbols, and Specters of Extraction
Chapter 2: Breaking African Ground: Location Shooting and the Search for Resource Enclaves
Chapter 3: Dredging Nollywood: Corporations, Land Reclamation, and the Lure of Neoliberalism
Chapter 4: Twilight Forests: Cinema and Deforestation
Chapter 5: Bad Fuel: Oil Consciousness from Hollywood to Nollywood
Conclusion: Environments of Interaction
Bibliography
Index

Noah Tsika

African Media in an Age of Extraction

Nollywood Geographies

African Media in an Age of Extraction takes a fresh, site-specific look at the relationship between moving images and the mining of natural resources, arguing that where we “place” Nollywood and other industries has important practical and conceptual consequences. Such locations are not just spatial metaphors but also tangible geographies with material connections to extractive economies. Sites of film production are often spaces of oil prospecting, timber harvesting, and mineral extraction—natural environments continuously transformed by capital. African Media in an Age of Extraction links such absolute spaces—reclaimed lands, razed forests, petroleum zones, abandoned coal mines collecting moss, vast tin fields inspiring illegal dredging by populations locked out of the licit economy—to the abstract and lived dimensions of film villages, shooting locations, and exhibition centers. The geographies of African media industries are not fixed locations cleanly separated from surrounding areas or from the wider world (including Hollywood), nor are they fully detachable from the mineral and hydrocarbon resources that also define them. Considering multiple scales—the local, the national, the regional, the continental, the planetary—this book takes stock of the physical terrain and extractive objects that Nollywood shares with other industries and that structure screen media more broadly. Topographies, political economies, national identities, and natural resources are entwined in ways that cinema makes intelligible and that carry the potential to transform the way we see the medium itself.
Author

Noah Tsika

Noah Tsika is Professor of Film and Media Studies at Queens College and the City University of New York Graduate Center. His books include Nollywood Stars: Media and Migration in West Africa and the Diaspora and Cinematic Independence: Constructing the Big Screen in Nigeria.