> xposted from H-AFRLITCINE@H-NET.MSU.EDU
> 
>  From: Creative Arts Television
>  [CATARCHIVE@AOL.COM]
>  
>  This memo is in response to several inquiries we
> have received for more
>  detailed information on the 1978 television
>  documentary THE CINEMA OF SENEGAL.
>  
>  This documentary is 27 minutes long and was made
>  when the Senegalese film director Ousmane SEMBENE
>  was in the United States on the occasion of the
>  premier of his new film CEDDO. On this program he
>  discusses filmmaking in Senegal, and by extension
>  filmmaking in black Africa with his compatriot the
>  elder statesman of African filmmaking Paulin
>  Soumanou VIEYRA  and Larry KARDISH, Associate
>  Curator in the Programming Division  of the Museum
>  of Modern Art in New York City. Mr. Kardish had at
>  that time arranged a retrospective of African
>  films at the Museum.
>  
>  Excerpts are shown on this program from Mr.
>  Sembene's film, and from ET LA NIEGE N'ETAIT PLUS
>  by Ababacar Samb-Makharam, and REOUH-TAKH by
>  Mahama Johnson Traore.
>  
>  The conversation is in French with a very
>  competent voice over translation. Senegal was in
>  1978 the only country in sub-Saharan Africa with a
>  film community, and this community was
>  astonishingly vital. The 20 or 30 directors there
>  had managed to make films against tremendous odds.
>  There were no production facilities in the
>  country -- all lab work was done in France.
>  Indeed, films in Senegal were until a few years
>  before this program produced only in the French
>  language because Senegal has several different
>  languages, no one of which -- it was
>  thought --would have guaranteed an audience
>  sufficient to warrant nationwide distribution.
>  The topics discussed with some passion on this
>  program concern this situation and such other
>  themes as art in a post-colonial society,
>  censorship and self-censorship, and the way
>  Senegalese films track the underlying concerns of
>  society, including the conflict between
>  Christianity and Islam and both with old
>  indigenous religions, the role of educated
>  Senegalese who return to a country in which they
>  can no longer relate so comfortably to older
>  traditions, etc. The film clips, too, reflect
>  these themes.
>  
>  $49.95, prepaid, plus shipping of $5 per package
>  in USA.
>  Creative Arts Television
>  Post Office Box 739
> Kent, CT 06757
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