In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Nollywood, Lagos, and the Good-Time Woman
  • Onookome Okome

Dreaming in the City

Kenneth Little’s less known but very incisive study, The Sociology of Urban Women’s Images in African Literature, provides a useful sociological guide to the study of women in popular Nollywood texts. It deals extensively with popular perceptions of women and the location of the discourses of their representations in African cities. While there is nothing theoretically earth-shaking about the way Little’s book describes this space of narrative articulation, I invoke Little’s study in my reading of women in Nollywood films for other reasons, the most obvious being my desire to show that the observations he made in the 1970s were as valid then as they are in 2012. My intention in this regard is to recontextualize Little’s premise to fit the context of Nollywood films. Constructing my reading of women as a historical continuum that begins with Little’s study in the 1970s allows me to shed light on the prevalence of the narrative marginality to which women are consigned in the urban African popular imagination, a narrative option to which Nollywood has so far subscribed in the three decades or so of its existence. I would suggest that this narrative option has remained part of Nollywood’s aesthetic diet because there is a carry-over of the aesthetic presence of women from the older art form of literature to the newer media-mediated images of Nollywood. This is the point that Adeleye-Fayemi makes eloquently in her essay “Either One or the Other: Images of Women in Nigerian Television.” Nollywood filmmakers, many of whom came from television, did not abandon this preoccupation and the peculiar ways women are represented for and on television in Nigeria. The television audience, which Adeleye-Fayemi discusses in her essay, is no different from that for Nollywood.

Like the television public that Adeleye-Fayemi studied, Nollywood’s public is “popular,” meaning that it is distinct from those that read the plays of Wole Soyinka or the novels of Chinua Achebe. Karin Barber’s eloquent study of audience in Africa, “Preliminary Notes on the Audience in Africa,” offers valuable insight into understanding this group. She argues, for instance, that “The concept of the ‘public,’ then, as a new form of coming-together characteristic of the colonial era, is a powerful one, but one which must be carefully qualified and which can [End Page 166] be properly understood only if the specific forms of address, use of space, modes of staging, and expectation and interactions of performers and spectators, are empirically established in all their surprising and subtle detail” (353).

The public of Nollywood come together around the narrative of the everyday and in the hope that what is narrativized reflects their tepid world of rapid change, transformation, and uncertainty. The stage where this act of “coming together” takes place is the city and, as an audience, the popular public is framed by the invisible and visible geographies of it. This audience is one with the city and is often defined by it. As “a new form of coming-together,” the Nollywood audience that emerges, like that of Nigerian television, is just as often made up of “hustlers, petty traders, or brokers in the informal sectors as waged employees” and, as Barber makes clear, “in this domain, individual difference, personal networks, creative abilities to innovate and mediate were often essential to economic survival” (“Preliminary Notes” 350). A crucial aspect of this creative agenda is the art of dreaming in the city.

Acknowledging the history of this popular audience is important because it sheds light on the consumption of the image of “good-time women,” which has been an essential cultural fixture within the growth of the city in Nigeria, as in many African cities. It is equally important to pay attention to the new means by which this Nollywood audience comes together, including reusing video technology in a time of social insecurity in cities such as Lagos.

While the focus of this essay is not to frame a historical debate on how to read beyond the privileged presence of the good-time woman, the research on this...

pdf

Share