'This is an excellent book: fresh, graceful, perspicacious, intelligent, current, and always alive with passionate sympathy for its subject... Barlet has impressive powers of synthesis, fashioning an insightful and often elegant thematic argument out of a vast quantity of material... It is hard to do justice to the richness of the book in a brief review... This is very much a book about understanding across cultures and the necessity of multiculturalism ... it is an "invitation au voyage", as Barlet says, and a singularly attractive introduction to African film.' Jonathan Haynes in Research in African Literatures 'The reader will discover the book's depth and a wealth of information on the varied cinemas of Africa.' International Journal of African Historical Studies
- Foreword
- Part I: Early Days, First Rites
- 1. Human Beings, Not Ants
- 2. Decolonizing the Imagination
- 3. "Proverbs Were Once People": Referring to the Past
- 4. Closing One's Eyes
- 5. Prizing Open the Cracked Identity
- 6. The Open Gaze
- Part II: The Roots of Story-Telling
- 1. Black Humour
- 2. Men Die but Words Remain: Narrative and the Oral Tradition
- 3. If Your Song is Not More Beautiful than the Silence, Then be Quiet
- 4. Speaking Your Own Language
- 5. Towards a Critique of Necessity
- Part III: A Black Perspective?
- 1. "If you want honey, you've got to take on the bees": The Difficulties of Film-making
- 2. The African Public: Diversity Itself
- 3. Northern Audiences Spinning like a Weathervane
- 4. "When you have meat to cook, you seek out the one who has a fire": The Logic of Western Aid
- 5. Televisual Strategies
- Conclusion