Brecht in pidgin: Oladipo Agboluaje's mother courage in Africa

Journal article


Kasule, Samuel 2018. Brecht in pidgin: Oladipo Agboluaje's mother courage in Africa. African Performance Review.
AuthorsKasule, Samuel
Abstract

African British performances and dramas mutually share their collective interest in the tempestuous afterlife of colonialism and post-independence and the different vibrations they carry into the present but in Africa’s performance forms and the various cultural ‘beats’. Regardless of their routes to Europe, Africans living in new national spaces of the diaspora yearn for Africa; hence, African British performances that emerge are caught between the longing to present Africa, which they left behind or one that is fading in their memories, and the diaspora with its pervasive pitiless demands. The interpretation of African British plays demands a more nuanced appreciation not only because of the multi-stranded and multi-voiced identities, but because they share a collective interest in the complex ‘afterlife’ following political independence of Africa from the colonialists to the present. Oladipo Agboluaje’s Mother Courage demonstrates that theatrical presentation, informed by the African British playwrights’ identification with the African continent reproduce local, transnational and/or trans-border dimensions. The essay traces the dialogue between Agboluaje’s adaptation of Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage and Brecht’s original text, focusing on how the African playwright’s travel between different ‘worlds’, across borders develops into a new web of ideas, characters, and words.

KeywordsOladipo; African; African Theatre; Mother Courage
Year2018
JournalAfrican Performance Review
PublisherAfrican Theatre Association
Web address (URL)http://hdl.handle.net/10545/623692
hdl:10545/623692
Publication dates2018
Publication process dates
Deposited25 Apr 2019, 14:03
Accepted2018
ContributorsUniversity of Derby
File
File Access Level
Open
File
File Access Level
Open
Permalink -

https://repository.derby.ac.uk/item/94764/brecht-in-pidgin-oladipo-agboluaje-s-mother-courage-in-africa

Download files

  • 27
    total views
  • 11
    total downloads
  • 1
    views this month
  • 0
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Public Art, Dance and Music and the Politics of Culture in East and Central Africa Interview with Faisal Kiwewa of Bayimba International Festival of the Arts, Uganda
Kasule, S. 2023. Public Art, Dance and Music and the Politics of Culture in East and Central Africa Interview with Faisal Kiwewa of Bayimba International Festival of the Arts, Uganda . (14.1), pp. 1-20.
The Post-colonial Storyteller: George Bwanika Seremba’s Come Good Rain
Kasule, S. 2021. The Post-colonial Storyteller: George Bwanika Seremba’s Come Good Rain. African Performance Review. 13 (1&2), pp. 9-20. https://doi.org/10.30817/0111apr0176
“I smoked them out”: Perspectives on the emergence of folk opera or ‘musical plays’ in Uganda.
Kasule, Sam 2020. “I smoked them out”: Perspectives on the emergence of folk opera or ‘musical plays’ in Uganda. in: Boydell and Brewer.
East African theatres and performances
Kasule, Samuel and Osita, Okagbue 2020. East African theatres and performances. Routledge.
Old ways, new ways: Theatre artists peopling the media in Uganda
Kasule, Samuel 2018. Old ways, new ways: Theatre artists peopling the media in Uganda. African Performance Review.
Walukagga the Black Smith
Kasule, Samuel 2018. Walukagga the Black Smith. Wavah Books Ltd.
Re-imagining Bertolt Brecht, redefining British Theatre: Oladipo Agboluaje's Mother Courage
Kasule, Samuel 2016. Re-imagining Bertolt Brecht, redefining British Theatre: Oladipo Agboluaje's Mother Courage. African Performance Review.
Playing and performance in Uganda: A conversation with Professor Justinian Ssalongo Tamusuza
Kasule, Samuel 2013. Playing and performance in Uganda: A conversation with Professor Justinian Ssalongo Tamusuza. African Performance Review.
‘Don’t Talk into my Talk’:oral narratives, cultural identity & popular performance in Colonial Uganda
Kasule, Samuel 2010. ‘Don’t Talk into my Talk’:oral narratives, cultural identity & popular performance in Colonial Uganda. in: James Currey.