Faustin Linyekula
Articles tagged with Faustin Linyekula
Tag Archive
- (For)getting
- 7 Maravilhas Naturais de Angola
- african screens
- Agricultura
- Aimé Césaire
- annett stenzel
- Artur Nunes
- Ayres de Magalhães
- beer
- black
- Black womanhood
- Carola Saavedra
- Central African Museum at Teruvren
- CES
- choreography
- Claire Tancons
- colonial unconscious
- composer
- Conceição Evaristo
- conclusion
- crio
- cultures
- Dakar
- Danting Chen
- debate
- denilson baniwa
- Djaimila Pereira de Almeida
- djaimilia pereira de almeida
- estudio
- exílio
- expression
- FMM
- forgetting
- Frelimo
- Frontiers
- geographies
- geometry
- Guinea Conakry
- History
- holocaust
- humanism
- identity
- installation
- interpretação do Brasil
- Irene Renée Karanja
- Jean-Yves Loude
- Joaquim Arena
- Joëlle Sambi
- José Cabral
- jungle
- L'Internationale
- Lisboa
- luanda
- Macau
- Mahla Filmes
- maputo
- Mattia Denisse
- midterms
- migrants
- mpla
- Museu é o mundo
- north-south division
- Noz de cola
- opression
- Osvalde Lewat
- pan African & arts festival
- patrimony
- pensamento
- poem
- polémica
- política
- political agendas
- pop culture
- pos-colonial
- Rampa
- representativity
- Resgate
- restitution of art
- revolution
- romance
- Samir Amin
- school
- sorcery
- Soviet Africa
- stop racism
- Sudan
- suíça
- terrorisme
- tourism
- transatlantic slave trade
- transnational
- Trump
- uk garage
- USA
- video
- walk
- WE WANT NO FUCKING ONE FOR FRESIDENT
- Witchcraft
- work
- Zimbabwe
 On the one hand I try to understand how African dance and as African considered corporalities are used as an aesthetic medium in common European cultural practices. How does European discourse  create which images of African dance and performances? On the other hand and crucially, I focus on the African side of the coin: how do African dancers and choreographers (re)act and which are their individual choices in the scope of various challenges and do European discourse have any significance on African dancers’ and choreographers’ decisions?
				On the one hand I try to understand how African dance and as African considered corporalities are used as an aesthetic medium in common European cultural practices. How does European discourse  create which images of African dance and performances? On the other hand and crucially, I focus on the African side of the coin: how do African dancers and choreographers (re)act and which are their individual choices in the scope of various challenges and do European discourse have any significance on African dancers’ and choreographers’ decisions?		



