African Cinema and Urbanism
By (Author) Marie-Paule Macdonald
By (author) Sheila Petty
1
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
3rd December 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
City and town planning: architectural aspects
Globalization
791.43655
Paperback
128
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
The changing nature of African landscapes, from rural to urbanized spaces, has been a pre-occupation of African media producers since the beginnings of the African film industry in the 1960s. The authors bring together several examples of African documentary and fiction screen media that present, evaluate and criticize urban and rural landscapes, and the rural and urban dynamic of development, in relation to contemporary issues, from biodiversity, sustainability and deforestation, to inequity, womens rights, political instability, to climate change-related themes of water and food supply, security and sovereignty. These works, comprising multi-platform cinema, streamed moving images and especially documentaries, depict the situations and open the door to rethinking and eventually to the possibilities of proposals responding to the situations portrayed.
Marie-Paule Macdonald is an associate professor at the School of Architecture, University of Waterloo. Her publications include Jimi Hendrix Soundscapes (2016) and rockspaces (2000). Macdonald is a registered architect, MOAQ (member of the Order of Architects of Quebec).
Sheila Petty is a professor of media studies at the University of Regina, author of Contact Zones: Memory, Origin and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema and co-editor of Directory of World Cinema: Africa.