Q&A on Something New in Old Town
The Q&A of Something New in Old Town hosted by Deep in the Heart Film Festival and Waco Cultural Arts Festival in discussion with filmmaker, Jude Fokwang
Anthropologist
topics related to Cameroon and Southern Cameroons broadly
The Q&A of Something New in Old Town hosted by Deep in the Heart Film Festival and Waco Cultural Arts Festival in discussion with filmmaker, Jude Fokwang
Extended Preview for Something New in Old Town. To learn more about this film and where to purchase it, visit: www.bonestudios.org For personal viewing, visit www.amazon.com for a copy at $9.99 If you’ve watched the documentary film, join us for … Continued
In his book, Lela in Bali: History through Ceremony in Cameroon (2006), anthropologist, Richard Fardon contends that Lela could be understood as a “barometer of the state of play in Bali politics: a ceremony that has adjusted to reflect the changing composition and external relations of the community” (2, italics mine). To extend this argument, it’s absence over several consecutive years could also index the state of politics – one that shows the growing dissonance between the ruled and the rulers.
Drinking from the Cosmic Gourd by Francis B. Nyamnjoh is a deeply infused treatise that aims to exorcise a hegemonic spell, occasioned by the ready-made epistemologies that have enthralled its consumers and reproducers in a dreamy state since the colonial age.
A review of The Lion and his Pride: The Politics of Commemoration in Cameroon by Kathrin Tiewa