Nollywood: The Making of a Film Empire
By (Author) Emily Witt
Columbia Global Reports
Columbia Global Reports
23rd January 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.4309669
Paperback
128
Width 127mm, Height 190mm
Emily Witt offers the first book for the general reader on Nollywood, a major cultural phenomenon that's little-known and rarely covered, but is becoming as big as Hollywood and Bollywood, and as fascinating. Film buffs, cultural omnivores looking for the next frontier, and people looking to know more about Nigeria -- the largely neglected yet largest country in Africa that's slowly becoming a world power -- will not be disappointed.
"Emily Witt blends monograph with vivid reportage in her latest offering: a short but sweet study of Nigerian cinema." --Financial Times
"The strength of Witt's book is her exploration of Nollywood's attempts to formalize its haphazard business model.... An insightful and entertaining book about a rapidly evolving industry." --Times Literary Supplement
"Witt's book addresses the major shifts in Nollywood: how the change in Nigeria's film distribution model affected both the content and the industry's digital future, among other topics. Witt, who spent five weeks in Nigeria researching Nollywood, seamlessly blends travel writing with cultural and media history for a product that is as informative as it is effortless to read." --VideoAge International
"An excellent, engaging introduction to an industry that deserves continued attention." --Africa is a Country
"An intriguing introduction to the Nigerian film industry, or 'Nollywood, ' which produces more films annually than Hollywood and falls short only of Bollywood in its output.... Witt's fascination with the business is contagious, and the view she provides into this fledgling market--punctuated with summaries of the overwrought plotlines of some popular movies--makes for an entertaining book." --Publishers Weekly
"Nollywood films are made by and for Nigerians but with stories that are compelling for Africans all over the continent and beyond. In Nollywood, Emily Witt introduces us to this phenomenon, describing the sorts of films Nollywood makes, the history of how these films have changed over time, and an overview of the directors, producers, marketers and pirates who make the industry what it is today. Writing with an eye for detail and an imagination for the big picture, Witt has produced a wonderful entry point for anyone interested in this dynamic media industry." --Brian Larkin, director, Institute of African Studies, Columbia University and author of Signal and Noise: Media, Infrastructure, and Urban Culture in Nigeria
"A colorful study of the enormously popular Nigerian film industry." --CounterPunch
"[Emily Witt is] one of America's foremost prose stylists under the age of forty." --New York Magazine
Emily Witt is a writer in New York City. She has written for The New Yorker, The New York Times, GQ, n+1, The London Review of Books, and many other places. She has degrees from Brown University, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and Cambridge University, and was a Fulbright scholar in Mozambique. Her first book, Future Sex, was published in 2016 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux