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Video Exposé: Metafiction and Message in Nigerian Films

McCain, Carmen

Authors



Abstract

In this article, I discuss how Nigerian film-makers respond to discourses surrounding film-making in Nigeria through using techniques of metafiction to theorize their roles as professionals and cultural mediators. Dividing my analysis into two sections, first on the English-language 'Nollywood' and second on the Hausa-language 'Kannywood', I examine self-reflexive techniques by which film-makers draw attention to their roles as truth-tellers and message-bearers and how metafictions about the film industries illustrate tensions between a junk-journalist expos aesthetic and a celebrity culture concerned with image. While there are many similarities in how film-makers in both 'Nollywood' and 'Kannywood' respond to criticism, I argue that these metafictions reveal differences in economic and cultural context that have resulted in an increasingly upwardly mobile Nollywood, while Kannywood has remained closer to the grass roots. Ultimately, these films express on a smaller scale the film-maker's theories about what the film industry as a whole does for the nation.

Citation

McCain, C. (2012). Video Exposé: Metafiction and Message in Nigerian Films. Journal of African Cinemas, 4(1), 25-57. https://doi.org/10.1386/jac.4.1.25_1

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 6, 2011
Publication Date Aug 1, 2012
Deposit Date Aug 2, 2023
Journal Journal of African Cinemas
Print ISSN 1754-9221
Electronic ISSN 1754-923X
Publisher Intellect
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 1
Pages 25-57
DOI https://doi.org/10.1386/jac.4.1.25_1
Keywords Nollywood, Kannywood, Nigerian Film, Hausa film, African film, metafiction, self-reflexivity, Islam
Publisher URL https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/10.1386/jac.4.1.25_1