
Anansegoro
Description
Anansegoro marks a pivotal point in the development in post-independence Ghanaian theatre. Developed in the 1960s, it represents a moment of convergence between theatrical innovation, political will, and a shared desire to develop a new theatre for a newly independent nation. This book provides a clear, useable guide to that moment and the unique form of theatre that resulted from it.
Anansegoro was positioned as a cornerstone of theatre training in Ghana, with generations of theatre makers drawing on Ghana's rich folk heritage in the creation of new plays. Uniquely, the authors examine how the introduction of the 2005 Ghana Copyright Act, which protects Ghana's folklore from commercial use has contributed to the steep decline in theatre making in Ghana in the 21st century.
Developed by Efua Sutherland (1924-1996) and her company following Ghana's independence from Britain in 1957, Anansegoro draws directly from the precolonial form of village storytelling, Ananses?m (literally stories about Ananse, the spider god). In Ananses?m a storyteller leads the audience through a story, to which they respond with song, dance and shifts to the narrative. Anansegoro merges these village storytelling traditions with Sutherland's education in western theatre, resulting in a distinctly Ghanaian performance style for the modern stage.
With the support of Ghana's first president, Kwame Nkrumah, Sutherland established much of Ghana's modern theatre infrastructure, with Anansegoro providing the template for playwrights that followed. Featuring a study of Abibigoro, the theatrical form established by Mohammed ben Abdallah in the 1980s, the book explores how Anansegoro was developed, expanded and in some ways rejected by a generation of playwrights.
More details
Persons
Stephen Collins is Reader in Performance at the University of the West of Scotland. He teaches and researches across a broad area of performance, intangible cultural heritage, and law. He has been a student of Ghanaian theatre for over twenty years and has written both an MPhil and PhD on the subject.
Nii Kwartelai Quartey is an independent scholar and theatre maker from Accra, Ghana. He is a founding member of Act for Change and the James Town Community Theatre Centre, Accra.
Content
Series preface
Introduction: Anansegoro: a national form of theatre?
1: Before Anansegoro: colonial era theatre in Ghana
2: Anansegoro, Ananses?m and the National Theatre Movement
3: Anansegoro, Abibigoro, the National Theatre of Ghana
4: Legacies of Anansegoro.
Conclusion: Copyrighting folklore: Anansegoro today
Notes
Bibliography
Index