The purpose of the African Women in Cinema Blog is to provide a space to discuss diverse topics relating to African women in cinema--filmmakers, actors, producers, and all film professionals. The blog is a public forum of the Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema.

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Showing posts with label African Diaspora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African Diaspora. Show all posts

19 February 2023

African Diasporas. Corpi colonizzati: riflessioni di donne nere della diaspora | Colonized Bodies: Reflections of Black Women of the Diaspora - Libreria GRIOT. (Roma)

Corpi colonizzati: riflessioni di donne nere della diaspora
Colonized Bodies: Reflections of Black Women of the Diaspora

Libreria GRIOT. (Roma) 16 - 02 - 2023
Corpi colonizzati: riflessioni di donne nere della diaspora. Conversazione in italiano e in inglese con Angelica Pesarini, docente, e le ricercatrici Fartun Mohamed e Iman Mohamed. Questo evento si inserisce nella Settimana di riflessioni e iniziative sui crimini e sulle eredità del colonialismo italiano, organizzata dalla

Colonized Bodies: Reflections of Black Women of the Diaspora. A panel of Afro-descendant scholars and researchers with Angelica Pesarini, Fartun Mohamed Gacal and Iman Mohamed reflect on what it means to study Italian colonialism from the opposite perspective, and on the embedded stories they bring with them as black women scholars.

Follow the conversation in Italian and English
https://www.facebook.com/LibreriaGRIOT/videos/5885997218149283/

About Libreria Griot

The Griot Bookshop, founded in June 2006 aims to promote the literary and intellectual production of African, Arab and diaspora writers, as an expression of transnational cultures and new unprecedented cosmopolitan identities.


Over the years, Griot has established itself not only as the first bookshop in Italy entirely dedicated to the cultures of Africa and its diaspora, the literatures of the Middle East, and together with anthropology, post-colonial and migrations studies, is a point of reference for all who believe that knowledge is a tool for change in society and beyond. 

Angelica Pesarini also contributed to the book, The Black Mediterranean: Bodies, Borders and Citizenship edited by the Black Mediterranean Collective


This edited volume aims to problematise and rethink the contemporary European migrant crisis in the Central Mediterranean through the lens of the Black Mediterranean. Bringing together scholars working in geography, political theory, sociology, and cultural studies, this volume takes the Black Mediterranean as a starting point for asking and answering a set of crucial questions about the racialized production of borders, bodies, and citizenship in contemporary Europe: what is the role of borders in controlling migrant flows from North Africa and the Middle East?; what is the place for black bodies in the Central Mediterranean context?; what is the relevance of the citizenship in reconsidering black subjectivities in Europe? The volume is divided into three parts. After the introduction, which provides an overview of the theoretical framework and the individual contributions, Part I focuses on the problem of borders, Part II features essays focused on the body, and Part III is dedicated to citizenship. 


The Black Mediterraenan Collective, an Italian-language website, is a collective laboratory that assembles transdisciplinary interventions in the field of postcolonial, border, race-gender-color, memory studies on the theme of the black Mediterranean. The contributions attempt to show the presence of other modernities that contest and go beyond the paradigmatic Eurocentrism that characterizes the regional history of the Mediterranean area. Instead, the perspective of the collective contains a multiplicity of periods and geographical forms; but it is also the starting point for the elaboration of diasporic, nomadic, eccentric, and decolonial subjectivities; for the construction of out-of-place bodies that subvert the genealogies imposed by the color line, by the discursiveness on gender and race, thus inventing new positionings starting from a strategic use of culture and public space. (Source: Website)

15 December 2019

African Diasporas: Afro Sistahs - webseries out of Australia

Afro Sistahs

Webseries out of Australia


Launched in 2018, the Afro Sistas Collective relates the lives of afrodescendant women in Australia in their journeys towards self discovery. 


Description

Short form dramedy series that follows the lives of 4 Afro-Australian women in Western Sydney as they weave their way around hair, bossy Aunties and “woke-baes”


About the Afro Sistahs Collective (Source: Website: https://www.afrosistahs.com/)

A group of young Afro Australian women, from diverse backgrounds, decided to meet in Western Sydney and talk about developing and presenting the world as it is for those that live in Australia, while being black.


As a production company we are passionate about presenting a unique blend of Australian culture, identity and youth providing insight into worlds widely experienced, but rarely seen. Steering away from the stereotypical narratives Afro Sistahs captures the diversity of contemporary Australia in full colour.


Our current project, the self titled digital series: Afro Sistahs --is a short-form dramedy series that explores the complex nature in which culture, ambition, love and of course, hair, intersect.


The Team includes:

Safia Amadou, Producer

Hawanatu Bangura, Director

Mumbi Hinga, Producer

Moreblessing Maturure, Story Editor/Writer

Ebube Uba, Digital Marketing Strategist

Rebekah Robertson, Writer


YouTube Series: https://www.youtube.com/@afrosistahs

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/afrosistahs/



 

26 October 2015

Ghanaian-German Jacqueline Nsiah’s digital Sankofa storytelling experience and other diasporic journeys


Ghanaian-German Jacqueline Nsiah, curator and cultural anthropologist, is a freelance film festival, arts and cultural consultant. She has curated, programmed and organized at several festivals: the Africa Film Festival in Cologne, the Cambridge African Film Festival, the African film festival UHURU in Rio de Janeiro, the Film Africa in London and the Berlinale Forum. In addition, she worked as a project manager for the Goethe-Institut’s African industry film platform cinidb.africa. She joined the Berlinale Selection Committee in 2023.

Polyglot transnational researcher and cultural media maker, she talks about these identities—navigating through Germany, Brazil, Ghana.

An interview with Jacqueline Nsiah by Beti Ellerson, October 2015. Photo by @blacticulate on instagram.

Updated December 2023.

Jacqueline, your final masters thesis project in Visual and Media Anthropology at Freie Universität, Berlin is a documentary titled “Returning from exile” talk about what inspired you to focus on this theme.

Interesting that you say it is a documentary title, because my initial idea was to make a documentary film but I felt I wasn't ready, yet, I might still do it. “Returning from exile” is about the second generation Ghanaians born in a European country or in the USA to Ghanaian parents, who decided to “return” or rather to live in Ghana. People like me, my tribe so to say. What inspired me to do the visual/audio website is partly my story but also I wanted to create a digital archive to register this moment. In Ghana we don't have a tradition to archive moments in time but in this digital era it is much easier. The idea is to continue to collect stories of the diasporas who are returning. I came up with the idea, when I visited Ghana again after four years not being there in December 2013. The minute I left the airplane and drove around Accra, the capital city I felt a sense of vibrancy. During my four-week trip, I met many Ghanaians like me who had “returned” and opened up bars, arts spaces, working on the governmental level or as freelance journalists and bloggers telling a different story of life in Ghana. I knew I wanted to be part of it and decided to move to Ghana in May 2014 and do wider research. I termed my research, which is part of an academic thesis “Returning from exile” because the motivation for most of the Ghanaian diaspora is to return on behalf of their parents and build this great nation, something that most of our parents were not able to do for various reasons.

Do you find the practice of return to be a phenomenon of this generation of Africans? To what extent does the connectivity of the global African diaspora contribute to this? I am thinking of social media and the Internet as a means to connect, influence and share. What have been your own experiences?

It is very difficult to say that it is a phenomenon of this generation, I want to say partly yes, but it really depends on whom we call a returnee. This actually contributed to my difficulties in doing my research. Over the years in Ghana, especially since 1992, when Ghana officially became a democracy, Ghanaians have been coming and going. Till this date it's difficult to really identify who lives in Ghana, because some of the returnee communities spend six months in Ghana and six months in their other country. Are they returnees?

Also, one mustn't ignore the many Ghanaians who are still trying to leave Ghana almost daily for economical reasons. A lot of them are working class or lower who struggle to find work or make a decent living in Ghana. They spend thousands of dollars or euros, all their savings and risk their lives in hope for a better life abroad. The returnees are professionals and are privileged to enter the work force in Ghana. We as Ghanaians should strive to give everyone the opportunity to find work and make a decent living, so that we can all enjoy the beauties Ghana has to offer.

Generally speaking though, I can say that social media and blogs have helped to show a different Africa/Ghana and has made it more appealing to its diaspora. I can definitely relate, reading about the different art spaces, exhibitions and festivals in Ghana got my attention and motivated me to see with my own eyes on what was happening and most importantly to be part of the movement. I never really felt part of something so wholeheartedly until I moved to Ghana, it's an exuberating feeling.

The short piece “No Place Like Home”, produced during a collaborative transcultural film workshop in Berlin is also about the notion of home among Diasporans, did this work evolve into “Returning from exile”?

That's a very interesting question, I would say it is looking at the other side. In “No Place Like Home” we talk to the first generation from various parts of Africa and ask why they left and why they go to an Afro Shop, a term that is coined in the new world, there's no place called Afro Shop on the continent, which in itself is very interesting. I was very interested in the sensory experience when entering an Afro Shop, what do you feel, smell or taste when you enter the Afro Shop? Does it remind you of home? What is home? And where is home? “No Place Like Home” and “Returning from exile” are absolutely linked. To me “No Place Like Home” is the journey and “Returning from exile” is the arrival.

There is an Afro-German movement that has had an important role to play in the search for identity among Germans of African parentage, are you and your participants of the study connected to this movement?

No, I am not and I don't think any of my participants are either. The Afro-German movement is poignant and very active indeed but I must say that I never felt part of that movement; I couldn't relate to the movement, I understand it but it's not my story. Although I was born and raised in Germany and lived there until my 21st year, I always felt Ghanaian as well as German. I never felt like I didn't have an identity or didn't know where to place it. My parents play a big role in this; both my parents are from Ghana and I was raised speaking Twi and eating Ghanaian food. Also, my parents tried to take us to Ghana as many times as possible. Though I never felt 100% Ghanaian, I always felt very connected.

On the “Returning from Exile” website the Sankofa symbol, which means to return, to trace one’s roots,
welcomes its visitors. Sankofa has been a symbol for the African diaspora, especial those whose history is linked to the trans-Atlantic slave trade and thus were severed from their ancestral cultures. How would you compare the difference and similarities of the separation that exiled Africans have experienced with that of Africans of the former group?

As you have quite rightly put it, the Sankofa symbol is the symbol for returning to one's ancestry, to come back home. It has been mainly used for the African diaspora that were forcefully taken to the new world, but due to conflict and economic struggles or to further ones education, Africans on the continent continued/ and continue to leave, some of them even on boats. The difference is that during the transatlantic slave trade my African brothers and sisters were taken by force, not knowing where there were going and of course not going in search of a better life. However, we are all searching for a deeper understanding of Ghana or the continent and to be connected to our ancestry.

You curated the first edition of Uhuru in 2014, an African Film Festival in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Talk about how the festival was conceived and the reception.

I lived in Brazil from 2010 to 2012 and whilst living in the city of Rio de Janeiro I met a lot of interest in Africa, particularly from the Afro-Brazilian population, who make 60% of Brazil's inhabitants. Unfortunately most Brazilians don't get a lot of mainstream information from Africa. Whilst living in Rio I worked for a number of film festivals, including the Rio International Film Festival. At the time I lived in Rio there was not a single film festival dedicated to only African cinema, so I came up with the idea to have an African film festival. I wrote a proposal of intention with an initial programme outline. Through a friend I approached the cultural production Burburinho, they loved the idea and raised the money to realise the first edition of the festival last year in November. For the first edition, I wanted to give a brief history lesson through cinema. I started with films that depicted the independence movement, through to the post colonial struggles, formation of a new 'African' identity, through to developments of the new generations in music, dance and cinematic expressions. I brought with me five directors and an industry specialist from 3 different countries from Africa, Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa. I had organised post screening discussions, Q&As and panels. The audience loved it, I got very good feedback, the sessions were almost always full and the media attention was great. I gave a number of TV interviews, radio and magazine interviews. I am hoping that Uhuru will be a biannual event and will travel to other parts of Brazil as well.

I have observed a genuine interest in African culture in Brazil in the past two decades. I have met several people who are very much involved with African cinema studies and film organising. I imagine you have
experienced this enthusiasm as well during your work in Brazil...

Yes absolutely, especially during the promotion of Uhuru I came across many bloggers, film students and other festivals across Brazil. This is great, and I believe the interests will keep on growing. Brazil holds the biggest African diaspora outside of Africa, they ought to have more information flow with the continent and vice versa.

You are on the team of the Royal African Society’s Annual Film Festival which will take place from 30 October to November. Please talk a bit about the role you play in the organisation of the festival.

I am a programmer for Film Africa, and I am very happy to be part of the team. This year is my first year as a programmer for the festival and I am really excited about the programme. We will have several exciting, interesting and thought-provoking strands. Our biggest strand this year is the Lusophone strand, where we will highlight the Lusophone African countries as they celebrate 40 years of independence this year. Furthermore, we will show African love films, which we programmed together with all the African film festivals in the United Kingdom. There will be a double bill on the father of African cinema, Ousmane Sembene from Senegal, who passed away in 2007. His autobiographer and friend, Samba Gadjigo made a documentary on the life and legacy of Sembene, which we will show in conjunction with his classic Xala In addition, we will showcase the latest titles from Ethiopia, a focus on music on film and the latest shorts from the continent.

29 September 2015

African Diasporas. Cinemafrodiscendente: Filmmakers of African Descent in Italian Cinema

Press release:

Cinemafrodiscendente – Filmmakers of African Descent in Italian Cinema (cinemafrodiscendente.com), online from 1 October, is a blog in English on the neglected reality and the legacy of Afrodescendant filmmakers in Italian cinema and audiovisual production. 

Cinemafrodiscendente is an initiative of Associazione Culturale Yeelen, like Cinemafrica – Africa e diaspore nel cinema (cinemafrica.org), the first and only website in Italy dedicated to Africa and diasporas in film, celebrating in 2016 its 10th year.

The blog Cinemafrodiscendente – Filmmakers of African Descent in Italian Cinema, cinemafrodiscendente.com, though no longer accessible was born as a spin-off research of a book called L’Africa in Italia: Per una controstoria postcoloniale del cinema italiano (Roma: Aracne Editrice, 2013) and edited by Leonardo De Franceschi. The domain was registered on February 2013 by Associazione Culturale Yeelen.

All the initiatives promoted by Yeelen are supervised by Maria Coletti and Leonardo De Franceschi. 

LINK OF INTEREST:

African women and cinema: Italy as asite of cinematic discourse and engagement

14 January 2011

Shirikiana Aina: Through the Door of No Return

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon introduced the declaration of the UN International Year for People of African Descent with these stirring remarks:

...I welcome this effort to pay tribute to the vast contributions made by people of African descent to the advancement of the political, economic, social and cultural development of all of our societies.
At the same time, we must remember that people of African descent are among those most affected by racism.
Too often, they face denial of basic rights such as access to quality health services and education.

Such fundamental wrongs have a long and terrible history.
The international community has affirmed that the transatlantic Slave trade was an appalling tragedy not only because of its barbarism but also because of its magnitude, organized nature and negation of the essential humanity of the victims.
Even today, Africans and people of African descent continue to suffer the consequences of these acts.

As we commemorate 2011, the United Nations International Year for People of African Descent, I return to an interview with Shirikiana Aina in 1997, she talked to me about her film Through the Door of No Return. A journey in her father's footsteps, as well as the journey of her ancestors and of present African diasporans.  She talks about her feelings as she tells a story through film, keeping a certain vision, a certain perspective, and at the same time as she undergoes a very deep, emotional journey. Through the Door of No Return was inspired by her experience with Sankofa, the acclaimed film directed by her husband, Haile Gerima, and of which she is the co-producer.

African Women in Cinema Collection
In this film, I go on a personal journey…I use my father's experience as sort of a bridge to get me there, as a child of Africa in the Diaspora looking for her roots or a re-connect. My father traveled to Africa when I was about seventeen and apparently was trying to move to Ghana.  Unfortunately, he contracted malaria.  It was fatal, and when he came back, he died. I was a budding adult, but we never had a chance to synthesize or pass on some of the things he gained by himself going on that journey. He was the child of a sharecropper.  He moved to the North and was involved in whatever industry was available to him.  And for him to make that leap to Africa in his lifetime was quite significant.  So, I used that as an opportunity for me to re-link to the continent.
…I wanted to go back at night the same way that we came.  I wanted to go back across the water the same way that we came.  I wanted to go back through that same door that you see in our other film, Sankofa. If you've seen that film, you've seen the dungeons and the slave forts on the coast of Ghana. In the so-called Elmina Castle, there is a very small door, so small that only one person could fit through it at a time.  You almost have to go sideways to get through this door and that is how we were exited out of that dungeon at night because the slave-traders figured that it would be the best way to sneak us out.  The surrounding residents know something is going on, they know about slavery of course, but just to keep it low key we were sent out at night.  We were sent down in these little boats and these boats would take us to the bigger ships.  By that time we had waited in these dungeons for months and months, we had watched many of our family members and other people die right next to us.  Food was almost non-existent, of course; the conditions were horrible: we were packed, no blankets.  We lived in these hellholes.  We were stored, actually, and the purpose of that storage was to wait until our numbers got high enough while waiting for the ships to come.  The ships would come once a year or however often and then they were filled up with two or three hundred of us packed even tighter.  So for me it was very significant to go back through that door because for me that was the point of departure, and it had to be the point of return, because it was the reason, it was the threshold…Those people who have not been paid tribute to, the bones of these millions and millions of people that carpet the bottom of the ocean are calling us back…
…Through the door, camera in hand, I followed the journey of my own father who went this similar process, and that helped me to make this link in finding other people's footprints, and symbolically I found his.  So that helped me to make a particular link and that was enough for me…When I was investigating all these connections it felt really interesting and symbolically important for me, his child, having taken up the profession of filmmaking, now to go back with my own camera to really pick up where he left off.  What I try to do in the film is to multiply his image with all the people I find going to Ghana who are basically doing the same thing, trying to reconnect, trying to sew back this terrible tear that history has caused between Africans in the Diaspora and Africans on the continent. The film goes on from this point to see to what extent we remember, because, as infantile as it really might be to think, "Do they remember us?" this is the horrible fact of history: it lasted four hundred years and there are concrete questions of economics, of rewriting history, that are confronting us now.  So how can we say, "Do they remember us?"  It feels like such an infantile question, but it really is at the root of a lot of our psyches, I think.
…The presence of pan-African work, the presence of people of the Diaspora in Ghana during the time of Kwame Nkrumah, for example, is what really just catapulted this whole project and I couldn't talk about W.E.B. Du Bois' influence in Ghana and the subsequent influence of independence on the continent, without talking about slavery. I just found that it was impossible. So the challenge that I faced with this camera and crew was to break down, sort of travel through this understanding. Du Bois asked to be buried at the foot of the castle, facing the ocean, the foot of a slave fort. He died in 1963, he was beyond his time; and that symbolism for the whole world is striking.  But I had to sort of do what he did.  He was at the foot of the castle, through the slave fort dungeons facing back, so he was making this human. And I had to do something similar—to look at how somebody like Kwame Nkrumah, a country boy who went to Europe to study, hooked up with George Padmore, studied Du Bois, studied Marcus Garvey, and then this group of people having the nerve to come back to Africa to liberate the whole damn place. To look at that I had to see how these men and women had the capacity to see themselves on equal planes.  Hadn't history divided them?  Hadn't history thrown them asunder?  Hadn't history said that now they were totally different kinds of human beings?  They were apparently able to cross that divide and I had to cross that divide myself. It was very important for me to do the same thing.


Through the Door of No Return (1997) by Shirikiana Aina

The above text was excerpted from an interview by Beti Ellerson published in Ecrans d’Afrique/African Screen (3rd Quarter, 1997 Nos. 21-22) under the title, “Do They Remember Us?”

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