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Touki Bouki
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Djibril Diop Mambéty’s exuberant, inventive and urgent filmTouki Bouki(The Journey of the Hyena) (1973) follows a young couple, Mory (Magaye Niang) and Anta (Mareme Niang), who dream of leaving their home in Dakar, Senegal for an imagined better life in Paris.
Rosalind Galt’s insightful study analysesTouki Bouki’s cinematic worlds, from its narrative of postcolonial migration to its influence by international film style, both nonetheless grounded in African visual cultures and critical perspectives.Touki Boukiexplores the intertwined histories of the postcolonial and the transnational, showing how the aesthetic and political ideas found in the experimentation of cinematic modernisms and New Waves are as African as they are European.
Galt’s study interweaves a conceptual framework of world cinema studies and anti/decolonial theory with close analysis ofTouki Bouki’s innovative audiovisual forms and its representations of desire and identity in postcolonial Senegal. Providing a detailed reading of the film’s themes and cinematic style, she argues for its classic status and for its long-lasting influence on world cinema.
Title: Touki Bouki
Description:
Djibril Diop Mambéty’s exuberant, inventive and urgent filmTouki Bouki(The Journey of the Hyena) (1973) follows a young couple, Mory (Magaye Niang) and Anta (Mareme Niang), who dream of leaving their home in Dakar, Senegal for an imagined better life in Paris.
Rosalind Galt’s insightful study analysesTouki Bouki’s cinematic worlds, from its narrative of postcolonial migration to its influence by international film style, both nonetheless grounded in African visual cultures and critical perspectives.
Touki Boukiexplores the intertwined histories of the postcolonial and the transnational, showing how the aesthetic and political ideas found in the experimentation of cinematic modernisms and New Waves are as African as they are European.
Galt’s study interweaves a conceptual framework of world cinema studies and anti/decolonial theory with close analysis ofTouki Bouki’s innovative audiovisual forms and its representations of desire and identity in postcolonial Senegal.
Providing a detailed reading of the film’s themes and cinematic style, she argues for its classic status and for its long-lasting influence on world cinema.

