|
Advanced search
Previous page
 |
Title
Cinema Theatres and Moral Space in Northern Nigeria |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1887/17280 |
Date
1999 |
Author(s)
Larkin, B. |
Abstract
The Plaza cinema squats on the edge of the Old City of Kano, Nigeria. Outside women sell bean cakes, men hawk cassettes, cigarettes, and oranges. Buses stop and taxis unload, disgorging passengers who hurry on to catch other buses, different taxis. 'Drop me at the Plaza.' 'Meet me at the El Dorado.' These quotidian directions are uttered by urbanites who have little interest in going to the cinema but who have internalized the fact that cinema theatres, along with mosques, the post office, banks, and other institutions of the post-colony, architecturally punctuate the city. Their built forms create an abstract skeletal structure around which the city's nervous system circulates. |
Subject(s)
Nigeria |
Language
en_US |
Publisher
ISIM, Leiden |
Type of publication
Article / Letter to editor |
Format
94833 bytes; application/pdf |
Source
3; 1; 13; 13; 1; ISIM Newsletter |
Repository
Leiden - University of Leiden
|
Added to C-A: 2012-06-05;15:21:25 |
© Connecting-Africa 2004-2023 | Last update: Friday, December 1, 2023 |
Webmaster
|