In this Book

Meaninglessness: Time, Rhythm, and the Undead in Postcolonial Cinema

Book
2022
summary
For too long, the approach to seemingly universal experiences like love, death, and even time in film has been dominated by the Global North. But what if such explorations developed horizontally instead? Drawing from both European and African cultural theorists, including Gilles Deleuze and Wole Soyinka, Vlad Dima invites us to consider what happens to postcolonial African film if we no longer privilege the idea of time. How else might we understand the cinematic image, and how would its meanings change? Meaninglessness: Time, Rhythm, and the Undead in Postcolonial Cinema is a study of meaning and meaninglessness through the figure of the undead, beginning with francophone Africa and extending to postcolonial France. Through the analysis of films like Mati Diop’s Atlantics and Jean-Pierre Bekolo’s Miraculous Weapons, Dima shows how the African cinematic image may produce meaning without any attachment to European time, and how that meaning is connected instead to the philosophy of negritude and to the notion of rhythm. Meaninglessness introduces the concept of the rhythm-sequence as a new way to understand the African moving image.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-x

Introduction

pp. xi-xxxii

Chapter 1. Meaning

pp. 1-40

Chapter 2. Less

pp. 41-80

Chapter 3. Ness

pp. 81-114

Chapter 4. Meaninglessness

pp. 115-138

Conclusion

pp. 139-142

Filmography

pp. 143-144

Notes

pp. 145-174

Bibliography

pp. 175-184

Index

pp. 185-192
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