瓦里亚:艾琳·萨拉米-阿贡洛伊的《Emotan:一个贝宁女英雄》和艾米·爱德古的《阿塔伊加拉大帝》中的文化民族主义和后殖民主义的必要性

Michael Olanrewaju Agboola
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了后殖民创作作家,尤其是剧作家的努力,他们试图重新思考面对西方文化扩张的非洲文化似乎受到的侵蚀。本研究采用描述分析和内容分析相结合的方法,以书籍、期刊文章和网络资料为研究对象。最令人感兴趣的是两部尼日利亚戏剧,艾米·伊德古的《伟大的阿塔·伊加拉》和艾琳·萨拉米-阿古洛伊的《Emotan:贝宁女英雄》,这两部戏剧被视为解释有问题的后殖民关系的范例文本。这篇文章有助于有关殖民主义和新殖民主义的隐藏议程的讨论,这些讨论通常被解释为文化扩张背后的西方经济利益。这篇文章展示了非洲后殖民作家如何努力通过推广非洲的文化美学来扭转这一趋势,因为他们代表了本土的生活方式,以及他们与西方文化模式之间有问题的互动。讨论的作品集中在与非洲生活有关的文化规范,如咨询神谕,祖先崇拜和节日;它们展示了非洲舞蹈、音乐、歌曲的美学特点,以及它们的符号意义。文章的结论是,尽管这两部戏剧“反击”了权力,但它们的力量在于对某些美学模式的表达,这些模式有助于非洲的自我定位。因此,这些戏剧不仅试图维护非洲文化,而且努力重新思考西方文化帝国主义的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Varia: Cultural Nationalism and Postcolonial Imperatives in Irene Salami-Agunloye’s Emotan: A Benin Heroine and Emmy Idegu’s Ata Igala the Great
This article examines the efforts of postcolonial creative writers, particularly dramatists, who attempt to rethink the seeming erosion of African culture in the face of western cultural expansion. The present research adopts the methods of descriptive and content analysis, as it dwells on books, journal articles, and internet materials to examine its subject. Of immediate interest are two Nigerian plays, Ata Igala the Great by Emmy Idegu and Emotan: A Benin Heroine by Irene Salami-Agunloye, which are read as paradigmatic texts for interpreting problematic postcolonial relationships. The article contributes to discussions related to colonialism and the hidden agenda of neo-colonialism, which are often interpreted in terms of western economic interests underlying cultural expansion. The article demonstrates how African postcolonial writers have striven to reverse this trend by promoting Africa’s cultural aesthetics as they represent indigenous ways of life and their problematic interaction with western cultural patterns. The discussed works focus on cultural canons related to African life, such as consultation with oracles, ancestor worship, and festivals; and they demonstrate the aesthetic specifics of African dance, music, songs, and their semiotic significance. The article concludes that even though the two plays “speak back” to power, their strength lies in the articulation of certain aesthetic patterns that contribute to African self-location. Thus, the plays not only attempt to assert African culture, but they also strive to rethink the meanings of western cultural imperialism.
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