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Cultural Identities, Interculturalism, and Theatre: On the Popular Yoruba Travelling Theatre
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2009
Extract
Intercultural processes have become a major concern of European theatre people and critics since the 1970s. They serve to bolster the postmodern discourse marked by endlessly alterable and changing cultures and, therefore, by essentially elusive cultural identities. But the aggressive global expansion of audiovisually mediated performing culture, primarily American television, film, and video, is being viewed as a menace to received cultural identities. There are fears that European cultures are being submerged and disfigured by an ever increasing inundation of overpowering American cultural productions and may even disintegrate altogether.
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References
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1. Beier, Ulli, ‘Yoruba Folk Opera’, African Music—Journal of the African Music Society 1 (1954), p. 33.Google Scholar
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12. Clark, E., Hubert Ogunde, pp. 103–6Google Scholar. See B. Jeyifo's interview with Funmilayo Ranko, leader of a major troupe in the 1970s, Jeyifo, Biodun, ‘The Yoruba Popular Travelling Theatre’, Nigerian Magazine Publication (Lagos, 1984), pp. 170–4.Google Scholar
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