One of the important, overriding concerns of the Third World cinema is the need to achieve control over the media images of one's own people and culture. Further, as in the case of the African cinema, there is also the struggle not simply to control the images, but also to purge from the screen the inaccurate and dehumanizing stereotypes that have predominated in the Western controlled film and television industry. The modern history of the African cinema has been an on-going process of reclaiming, as well as reexamining, their traditions and history in a vital effort to rediscover their identity. Or as the Senegalese writer and filmmaker Ousmane Sembene once stated: "We must understand our traditions before we can hope to understand ourselves."
Sembene's pursuit of this understanding has predominated in his work as a poet, novelist, critic, and filmmaker and his seminal position in the African cinema is due not only to the fact that he directed the first totally African film with his 1963 production of
Borom Sarret, but also because of the consistently precise and audacious perspective that he brings to his cinematic studies of modern Africa. In his early films, such as
Borom Sarret and
Black Girl (Senegal 1965), Sembene concerned himself with the realities, and disparities, of post-colonial Senegal as reflected within the interiorized thoughts and feelings of the central characters in each film. In part, Sembene is attempting to force the viewer into a direct confrontation with the inner pain and despairing humanity of characters who are otherwise denied a voice within the social arena. Further, Sembene presents a bitter portrait of an alienated African psychology that is forced to define itself within the context of an unsympathetic, European derived system of values.
A recurring history of exploitation has long plagued such African countries as Senegal. Even before the period of French colonization, the region of Senegal was vulnerable to the political manipulations of empire-builders and religious proselytes. Islam, which arrived in the region soon after the religion's founding, originally offered a vocal force in opposition to slavery and feudalism. In turn, the early Islamic imams were willing to co-exist with the fetishistic shamans of the various cultures in the area. In time, however, Islamic leaders became increasingly concerned with aggregating their political power and, in the process, they began collaborating with both colonial forces and elements in the slave trade. This history is the background to the narrative of
Njangaan (Senegal 1974) by Manama Johnson Traore. This film, which is the most critically praised of Traore's work, also offers an introduction to the second generation of Senegalese filmmakers who emerged during the 1970s.
Liberation through violent revolution was a necessary process for many modern African countries and the film
Sambtzanga (Angola 1972]. presents an incisive and intimate view of Portuguese oppression and Angolais resistance and its effects upon one individual woman. The director of the film, Sarah Maldoror, was the wife of an Angolais resistance leader and, as part of her training in film production, had worked as the assistant director on Gillo Pontecorvo's production of
The Battle of Algiers (Italy 1966). While the film contains a highly charged and vibrant sense of agitprop similar to Pontecorvo's work, Sambizanga also offers an emotional sense of one's own personal loss in the wake of historic forces.
The traditional structures of the African folktale has had a profound influence on the African cinema.
Wend Kuuni (Burkina Faso 1982J, directed by Gaston Kabore, uses the poetic rhythms and narrative concerns of the African folktale and successfully attempts a recreation of a style of storytelling that predates European influence. In so doing,
Wend Kuuni experiments with this oral tradition as the basis for a visual art form.
The merger between cinematic language and traditional African narrative forms is taken even further in
Jom, the Story of a People (Senegal 1982) by Ababacar Samb Makharam. The film presents an epic overview of the history of Senegal within the structure of a tale told by a griot. Griots are the itinerant poets and musicians of Senegal who has the responsibility of recounting and maintaining the history of a tribe or people and, because of their duty in preserving the memories of their people, the griots hold an especially important place within the West African cultural community. The role of the griot was, perhaps, best stated by Sembene: "His work reflects and synthesizes the problems, the struggles, and the hopes of his people," In
Jom, the Story of a People, Makharam's creates the film equivalent of a griot1s tale with all of its musical and moral strengths intact.
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