Saturday, December 29, 2018

Of Religion, Theodicy, and Monsters

"Like his far more eloquent counterpart in Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus, [James] Whale's god-forsaken, posthumous [1935 movie The Bride of Frankenstein] monster is something of a theologian. Not a theologian with all the answers but one who raises profound questions, questions that survive their answers. By playing God, does one inadvertently end up playing monster? Who is more monstrous, the creatures who must live through this vale of tears, or the creator who put them here? What does it mean to be 'monstrous' anyway? Are we not all rendered monstrous under God? Is our monstrosity in the image of God? Where is God in all this?
          Very quickly we find ourselves in deeply unsettling theological territory, a territory traditionally called theodicy. Theodicy concerns divine justice in the face of unjustifiable suffering. Why do the wicked prosper and the righteous suffer? In a world such as ours, how can we possibly conceive of a just God? Indeed, Shelley's novel begins with an epigraph from the quintessential English theodicy, Paradise Lost by John Milton, whose explicit although inevitably unrealized aim is to 'justify the ways of God to men.' Shelley's epigraph draws us to the theodic question, which echoes far beyond any answer, and which will be posed again and again by the monster to Victor Frankenstein throughout the novel:

          Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay
          To mold Me man, Did I solicit thee
          From darkness to promote me?
                                                         --Paradise Lost X.743-5

The voice of the monster is the audacious voice of theodicy. It is addressed not only to the creator Frankenstein but also to the creator God. Why did you make me? Why did you put me here? What were you thinking? What kind of a world is this? What kind of divine justice is this? What kind of God are you? The monster in Shelley's novel, as in Whale's movie, stands for these questions and terrifying religious uncertainties. His questions pry at cracks in the world's foundations that open onto abysses of unknowing."
Timothy K. Beal, 2002, 3
Religion and its Monsters

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Of Monsters and Contemporary Cultures

"Contemporary cultural interest in monsters is still very strong. ... Monsters of demonic possession are imaginative expressions of ... loss of control. The specific face of the monsters will vary from culture to culture, but the universal dimension seems undeniable."
Stephen T. Asma, 2009, 279, 284
On Monsters: An Unnatural History of Our Worst Fears

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Of African Female Filmmakers

Hermon Hailay, dir. Price of Love (2015)
"Traditionally denied access to the medium of film, African women have been increasingly taking control of the camera in recent years. Female video makers are exploring cultural conventions and innovative strategies that challenge Eurocentric and male chauvinistic assumptions/readings of black female subjectivity. One of the most innovative video-films by an African woman that emerged from this practice is Veronica Quashie's Twin Lovers (Ghana, 1996). The film is about the consequences of urban life, the lure of the city, promiscuity among young people, and the menace of of 'sugar daddies.' The film revolves around the central character Juliet, who at about the age of 22 is still a virgin until she meets Kobbie - not by choice, but in the company of socializing friends. Her friend Doreen slips a narcotic into her drink making it possible for Kobbie to lure her home to be raped. Kobbie is a rich engineer and, as a notorious Casanova, he uses his charm and other dubious tactics including intimidation and deceit to achieve his goal. As a village girl, Juliet is pure, but the city full of vices, to which she went for education, destroys her ambitions. Now pregnant, she is terrified that her father will kill her if she fails to perform puberty rite, a ritual of honor that makes parents proud. In tranquil villages where tradition is upheld, sex and pregnancy before marriage are abhorred. Here, the film reminds us that villages are where cultures and traditions are preserved in modern Africa, while the city is a confluence of foreign influences. This emphasis on purity and culture also explains why in those days in Africa, civil servants who lived in the cities would go home to their respective villages to marry, ignoring the young city women, who were thought to be contaminated."
Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike, 2003, 130
"Video Booms and the Manifestations of 'First' Cinema in Anglophone Africa,"
in Rethinking Third Cinema, ed. Anthony R. Guneratne and Wimal Dissanayake

Dear God: A Child Writes


Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Nollywood is Too Big to Ever Die

"Nollywood is too big to ever die: it is the third [now second] largest film industry in the world, as we
like to keep repeating, and it will eventually be seen as one of the world's major film cultures. The story of its beginnings ought to be told with an appropriate level of depth, detail, and accuracy. One hopes that Nollywood will evolve into dazzling glory impossible to imagine at present, but the remarkable extent to which it holds on to and repeats themes, stories, and aesthetics suggests that a lot that will remain fundamental was laid down at or near the very beginning, that some of the early works will remain as classics, and that whatever the future of film in Nigeria turns out to be, it will be recognizable as an extension of what has already been created. To an extraordinary degree, [Kenneth] Nnebue's Living in Bondage (1992), the film that started the Nigerian video boom, contains the seeds of almost everything that followed."
Jonathan Haynes, 2010, 15
"What Is to Be Done?: Film Studies and Nigerian and Ghanaian Videos,"
in Viewing African Cinema in the Twenty-first Century: Art Films and the 
Nollywood Video Revolution, ed. Mahir Saul and Ralph A. Austen

Saturday, December 01, 2018

In Memoriam: Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike

Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike (1950 - 2018)
-Professor of communication and Africana studies
-Scholar of cinema and film history, African cinema, film and media of the African diaspora
-Author of Black African Cinema (1994), Questioning African Cinema: Conversations with Filmmakers (2002), African Cinema: Narratives, Perspectives and Poetics (2014), and Critical Approaches to African Cinema Discourse (2014)