Description
Decolonising African Theatre offers a comprehensive exploration of how African theatrical practices have resisted and reimagined Western colonial influences. Samuel Ravengai argues for the necessity of decolonizing theatre as both artistic practice and academic discipline, examining the historical and contemporary dynamics that have shaped African performance traditions.
The book investigates how African theatre artists and scholars can reclaim agency in defining their own theatrical languages, aesthetics, and critical frameworks. Ravengai engages with postcolonial theory, performance studies, and African intellectual traditions to demonstrate theatre’s potential as a decolonial tool. Through analysis of various African theatrical movements and practices, the work challenges Eurocentric perspectives that have long dominated theatre criticism and history.
Essential for scholars of African studies, theatre, performance, and postcolonial studies, this volume contributes significantly to ongoing conversations about cultural decolonization and the politics of representation in contemporary African theatre.







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