05685nam 2200601 450 991078808650332120230803200050.094-012-1180-910.1163/9789401211802(CKB)2670000000578296(EBL)1812990(SSID)ssj0001440814(PQKBManifestationID)11889698(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001440814(PQKBWorkID)11391386(PQKB)11734636(MiAaPQ)EBC1812990(OCoLC)893409261(OCoLC)893454101(nllekb)BRILL9789401211802(Au-PeEL)EBL1812990(CaPaEBR)ebr10992232(CaONFJC)MIL665230(OCoLC)897069761(EXLCZ)99267000000057829620141219h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSyncretic arenas essays on postcolonial African drama and theatre for Esiaba Irobi /edited by Isidore DialaAmsterdam, Netherlands ;New York :Rodopi,2014.©20141 online resource (381 p.)Cross/Cultures. Readings in the Post/Colonial Literatures in English ;177Description based upon print version of record.1-322-33948-1 90-420-3898-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Preliminary Material -- Esiaba Irobi: The Tragedy of Exile /Olu Oguibe -- Esiaba Irobi: A Personal Note /Martin Banham -- Esiaba Irobi and His Muse /Georgina Alaukwu–Ehuriah -- Remembering Esiaba Irobi: at the International Research Centre ‘Interweaving Performance Cultures’ in Berlin, 2009–2010 /Erika Fischer–Lichte -- Esiaba Irobi: Death Does Not Kill a Song /Femi Osofisan -- On My Birthday /Tanure Ojaide -- Omonla:* Your Like Will Never Be There Again: 7 Prose Poems/Haikus [For Esiaba Irobi] /Biodun Jeyifo -- Half a Century Death /Benedictus Nwachukwu -- Madding Crowd (For Esiaba Irobi and Kofi Awoonor) /Obiwu -- Seven Stations of the Cross (for Esiaba Irobi) /Olu Oguibe -- Esiaba Irobi’s Legacy: Theory and Practice of Postcolonial Performance -- Between Soyinka and Clark: The Dynamics of Influence on Esiaba Irobi’s Nwokedi /Henry Obi Ajumeze -- Eclipsed Visions: Esiaba Irobi Interviewed /Leon Osu -- Theatre and Modernization in the First Age of Globalization: The Cairo Opera House /Christopher Balme -- Autobiography as Counter-Memory in The Orange Earth of Adam Small /Hein Willemse -- Directing Politics: Soyinkan Parallels in the Works of Uganda’s Robert Serumaga /Don Rubin -- Afrika Cultural Centre: Phoenix under Apartheid and Burnt Ember under Democracy? /Bhekizizwe Peterson -- The Anxiety of Class in Kenyan Drama: A Reading of Boy’s Benta and Sibi-Okumu’s Role Play /Christopher Odhiambo Joseph -- A Heritage of Violence: Paradoxes of Freedom and Memory in Recent South African Play-Texts /Anton Krueger -- African Drama and the Construction of an Indigenous Cultural Identity: An Examination of Four Major Nigerian Plays /Kene Igweonu -- The Creative Development, Importance, and Dramaturgy of Duro Ladipo’s Ọba Kò So /Oluseyi Ogunjobi -- Critical Responses: The Evolution of the Theatre Critic in South Africa /Temple Hauptfleisch -- “I want to dialogue”: Chief Muraina Oyelami Talking Oṣogbo and Beyond /Christine Matzke -- Notes on Contributors -- Index.This collection in part examines the legacy of the consummate Nigerian stage artist and scholar, Esiaba Irobi (1960–2010). Poems, tributes, and studies celebrate Irobi’s significance as actor, playwright, director, poet, and theatre theorist. Irobi’s life, temper, times, and career are inextricably linked to the history, development, concerns, and uses of drama and theatre in Africa. The contributions highlight the evolution of autochthonous theatrical practices: the interaction between Western and indigenous African performance traditions; colonial/postcolonial government policies and the mutations of drama and theatre (and critical commentary); the tensions inherent in postcolonial conceptions of history, identity, nationhood, and articulations of alternative aesthetics, pedagogies, and epistemologies for postcolonial African theatre; staging African plays in the West; and the constituencies of the contemporary African playwright and director. The strength of these studies derives primarily from nuanced examinations of the concerns and careers of particular African playwrights; the history, offerings, and fortunes of particular theatrical arenas, and close explorations of specific performances and texts. The foregrounding of correspondences in the dramaturgies and intellectual ferment of the continent critically accentuates equally privileged regional, historical, and other crucial specificities. Situated in time and place while underscoring the political and intellectual intersections of a shared history of colonialism, the contributions to Syncretic Arenas , individually and collectively, reveal the transformations and growing strengths of postcolonialism as an analytical strategy.Cross/cultures ;177.African dramaHistory and criticismAfrican dramaHistory and criticism.809.20096Diala IsidoreMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910788086503321Syncretic arenas3783194UNINA