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Sensational Movies

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Tracing the rise and development of the Ghanaian video film industry between 1985 and 2010, Sensational Movies examines video movies as seismographic devices recording a culture and society in tur...
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  • 16 October 2015
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Tracing the rise and development of the Ghanaian video film industry between 1985 and 2010, Sensational Movies examines video movies as seismographic devices recording a culture and society in turmoil. This book captures the dynamic process of popular filmmaking in Ghana as a new medium for the imagination and tracks the interlacing of the medium’s technological, economic, social, cultural, and religious aspects. Stepping into the void left by the defunct state film industry, video movies negotiate the imaginaries deployed by state cinema on the one hand and Christianity on the other.

Birgit Meyer analyzes Ghanaian video as a powerful, sensational form. Colliding with the state film industry’s representations of culture, these movies are indebted to religious notions of divination and revelation. Exploring the format of “film as revelation,” Meyer unpacks the affinity between cinematic and popular Christian modes of looking and showcases the transgressive potential haunting figurations of the occult. In this brilliant study, Meyer offers a deep, conceptually innovative analysis of the role of visual culture within the politics and aesthetics of religious world making.
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Price: $95.00
Pages: 408
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 16 October 2015
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520287679
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

"A thoughtful and theoretically powerful study, culminating two decades of fieldwork and movie-watching, of mediatization and materialization. . . . An important contribution to the anthropology of religion, of popular media, of invented tradition, and of the cultural formation of the senses and experience."
BirgitMeyer is a cultural anthropologist and Professor of Religious Studies at Utrecht University, The Netherlands. She is Vice-Chair of the International African Institute and a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.


 
List of Illustrations
Preface
Abbreviations
 
Introduction   
 
1   •     The Video Film Industry 
2   •     Accra, Visions of the City  
3   •     Moving Pictures and Lived Experience
4   •     Film as Revelation 
5   •     Picturing the Occult
6   •     Animation 
7   •     Mediating Traditional Culture
 
Epilogue 
 
Notes 
References
Filmography
Index