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[Commlist] CFP on Perspectives on Indigenous language films in the Global South
Wed Jul 06 14:03:00 GMT 2022
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
*Perspectives on Indigenous Language Films in the Global South *
*(A Book Project) *
**
*Book Editors*
*Osakue Stevenson Omoera, Ph.D.*
*Faculty of Humanities, Federal University Otuoke, Bayelsa State, Nigeria*
*Email: **(omoera /at/ yahoo.com)**; **(osakueso /at/ fuotuoke.edu.ng)***
*Scopus ID: 56052398700; ORCiD: **https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1086-7874***
*Web of Science ResearcherID R-7440-2019*
**
*Francoise Ugochukwu, Ph.D.*
*Research Fellow, Open University (UK); Senior Research Fellow, IFRA
(Ibadan) Website: **https://francoiseugochukwu.academia.edu/**Email:
**(fugochukwu /at/ yahoo.com)***
* ORCID **http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4317-5826***
Filmmaking is a contemporary development medium which can be used in
preserving and archiving, promoting and projecting indigenous languages,
cultures, heritages and mores of the many indigenous peoples tucked away
in the ‘peripheries’ of 21st century global cinema. In more senses than
one, filmmaking is about human development and human development is a
story which is told and retold through visual aesthetics for personal or
communal edification, enlightenment and education. Thus, film is a
window to indigenous cultures, values and heritages which help to shape
the consciousness of millions of people in an age where information and
communication technologies (ICTs) reign supreme.**
Today, a lot appears to be happening in the film popular culture domain
among the indigenous peoples in the Global South that has scarcely
received academic attention. It is in this realization that we propose a
book project titled “Perspectives on Indigenous Language Films in the
Global South.” The intention here is to give a ‘voice’ to the
‘voiceless’, give visibility to the filmmaking activities, filmmakers
and their traditions, audiences, among other issues of the so-called
cinematic ‘peripheries’, exploring how they stage and perform their
indigenousness through their native films. The book shall seek to
underscore the existence of a significant corpus of visual literature
outside the Hollywood and Bollywood or Western paradigms. It seeks to
open a space to discuss alternative sensibilities, sensitivities,
aesthetics, meanings, and contexts in filmmaking.
The articles in the book are expected to address the historical,
cultural, social, philosophical and linguistic diversities engrained in
colonial and postcolonial realities of the Afrikaan, Akan (Twi), Bahasa
Indonesia, Bemba, Benin (Edo), Brazilian Portuguese, Chichewa, Cuban
Spanish, Dagaare, Dangbe, Ebira, Esan, Epie, Ewe, Fijian, Fulani,
Ga,Haitian Creole, Hausa, Hindi, Idoma, Igbo, Ijaw, Itsekiri, Kanuri,
Kasem, Kikuyu, Nembe, Nzema, Malay, Pakistani, Papiamentu, Swahili, Tiv,
Urhobo, Xhosa, Zulu, among other peoples and languages scattered across
the Global South. Essay contributions to the book are expected to be
made by film scholars, filmmakers, film critics and theorists, culture
administrators and archivists, language and green studies aficionados,
from both the northern and southern hemispheres. Essays should be in
12-point Times New Roman, and 7th ed. of APA referencing should be used.
Interested contributors should send in their abstracts to the above
emails by November 12, 2022, and full papers by March 9, 2023. The book
is expected to be published by Adonis and Abbey Publishers, United
Kingdom in the last quarter of 2023.
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