Description
About the Author
Iyorwuese Hagher is a professor of theater and drama and former chair of the Department of Theater and Communications Arts at the University of Jos. A scholar, diplomat, and activist, he was Nigeria's ambassador to Mexico, the high commissioner to Canada, and a former Nigerian senator and minister. He is also a playwright, poet, and the founder and head of the African Leadership Institute in Dayton, Ohio.
Reviews
"Professor Hagher reveals and analyses these theatrical performances with keen insight and deep knowledge. A wonderful addition to the literature on African masquerade and theater." -- Herbert Skip Cole, author of Ideals and power in the Art of Africa
"This book is an occasion for anyone who cares about theater, scholarship, and cultural survival." -- Don Rubin, York University, Toronto, editor of the six-volume World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theater
"Hagher's trenchant defence of the Kwagh-hir's collective capacity for community well-being and social change makes this study important and highly significant for practitioners of applied theater in the globalized twenty-first century." -- Michael Etherton, author of The Development of African Drama and author with James Reed of Chikwakwa Remembered: Theater and Politics in Zambia 1968-1972
"The authenticity of this book is the result of a combination of lived experience and rigorous research that has spanned over three decades. It is a unique book that will continue to be an asset to scholars and students of culture, and especially for those who want to understand the interface between culture, voice and change." -- Oga Steve Abah, professor of theater and culture for development, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria
Book Information
ISBN 9780761862505
Author Iyorwuese Hagher
Format Paperback
Page Count 286
Imprint University Press of America
Publisher University Press of America
Weight(grams) 435g
Dimensions(mm) 227mm * 151mm * 24mm