In Indirect Subjects, Matthew H. Brown analyzes the content of the prolific Nigerian film industry's mostly direct-to-video movies alongside local practices of production and circulation to show how screen media play spatial roles in global power relations. Scrutinizing the deep structural and aesthetic relationship between Nollywood, as the industry is known, and Nigerian state television, Brown tracks how several Nollywood films, in ways similar to both state television programs and colonial cinema productions, invite local spectators to experience liberal capitalism not only as a form of exploitation but as a set of expectations about the future. This mode of address, which Brown refers to as “periliberalism,” sustains global power imbalances by locating viewers within liberalism but distancing them from its processes and benefits. Locating the wellspring of this hypocrisy in the British Empire's practice of indirect rule, Brown contends that culture industries like Nollywood can sustain capitalism by isolating ordinary African people, whose labor and consumption fuel it, from its exclusive privileges.
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Matthew H. Brown explores the connections between Nigeria's booming film industry, state television, and colonial legacies that together involve spectators in global capitalism while denying them its privileges.
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Acknowledgments  vii Introduction: Indirect Subjectivities and Periliberalism  1 Part I. 1. Subjects of Indirect Rule: Nigeria, Cinema, and Liberal Empire  33 2. Emergency of the State: Television, Pedagogical Imperatives, and The Village Headmaster  66 Part II. 3. "No Romance without Finance": Feminine Melodrama, Soap Opera, and the Male Breadwinner Ideal  99 4. Breadlosers: Masculine Melodrama, Money Magic, and the Moral Occult Economy  150 5. Specters of Sovereignty: Epic, Gothic, and the Ruins of a Past That Never Was  185 6. "What's Wrong with 419"?: Comedy, Corruption, and Conspiratorial Mirrors  221 Conclusion: Fantasies of Integration or Fantasies of Sovereignty  263 Notes  271 Filmography  285 Bibliography  289 Index  303
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“Indirect Subjects is an ambitious work providing an overview of film in Nigeria from its earliest days, through the height of state television to the rise of Nollywood. It also offers a rethinking of this history by examining the political, economic, and aesthetic logics that tie this history together. This is an insightful work for both scholars and students analyzing iconic films and television series in a new way. Doing so, it offers a new understanding of political aesthetics in Nigeria.”
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781478014195
Publisert
2021-11-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Duke University Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Matthew H. Brown is Assistant Professor of African Cultural Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.