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<title>GENOCIDE AND DISSONANCE IN SELECT AFRICAN FILMS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1954</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 19:11:32 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T19:11:32Z</dc:date>
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<title>GENOCIDE AND DISSONANCE IN SELECT AFRICAN FILMS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1955</link>
<description>GENOCIDE AND DISSONANCE IN SELECT AFRICAN FILMS
MGBEMERE, Chijindu Daniel
Genocide and dissonance, experienced by ethnic nationalities in Africa, lead to wanton&#13;
destruction of lives and property. Previous studies on these phenomena concentrated on&#13;
causal factors and various preventive and punitive measures against them, as reflected in&#13;
radio and print media, with little attention paid to their representation in films. This study&#13;
was, therefore, designed to interrogate genocide and dissonance in African films, with a view&#13;
to determining their nature and effects.&#13;
Kenneth Arrow’s Social Choice and Gregory Bateson’s framing theories were adopted as the&#13;
framework, while the descriptive design was used. Five films were purposively selected for&#13;
their treatment of genocide and dissonance. They are Hotel Rwanda (HR), Half of a Yellow&#13;
Sun (HYS), Attack on Darfur (AD), Sarafina and Somewhere in Africa (SA). Data were&#13;
subjected to critical analysis.&#13;
Hotel Rwanda, HYS and SA are the films with genocide contents, while Sarafina and AD&#13;
have dissonance contents. Causes of genocide and dissonance in the films are political&#13;
dominance (HR, HYS, AD, Sarafina and SA), ethnic and religious intolerance (AD and SA)&#13;
and battling for limited economic resources (HR and AD). Victims are exposed to physical&#13;
and mental abuse (HR, HYS and AD), varying degree of displacement (HR and HYS), child&#13;
soldering (HYS), property loot (AD), hunger and starvation (HYS, HR), rape (HR, SA and&#13;
AD), sex-slavery (HR), killing by those close to them (HR) as well as mental and&#13;
psychosomatic stress disorders (HR and HYS). Genocide and dissonance are tacitly sponsored&#13;
by the State (HR, HYS, AD, Sarafina and SA). Religious and educational institutions play&#13;
contrastive role in HR. While school teachers in the high school prefer to die with their&#13;
students instead of isolating them according to ethnic groups, religious priests betray those&#13;
that run to them for safety. By their action and inaction, local and international media,&#13;
interested members of the international community and aid agencies abet genocide and&#13;
dissonance that they are supposed to prevent. There are no consequences for the leaders of&#13;
genocides and dissonance in all the films, except in SA where General Mumbasa is eventually&#13;
assassinated. There is flagrant abuse of the dignity of the human person and the sanctity of&#13;
life, as Africans are depicted as brutish and wild in all the films. Genocide and dissonance are&#13;
uncivilized ways of settling differences, dialogue instead of violence is the antidote needed&#13;
for sustaining peaceful coexistence, healthy and harmonious relationship can still be achieved&#13;
after incidence of genocide and dissonance are the central messages common to all the films.&#13;
Genocide and dissonance in Africa, as presented in the films, are sustained by the selfish&#13;
interest of local and international state and non-state actors, while their effects on the people&#13;
are physical, mental, social and economic.
</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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