Ken Harrow's Trash: Garbage In Garbage Out
Reviewed by Biko Agozino
Ken Harrow is a very thoughtful writer whose contributions to online debates is always a signal to me that a thread is important enough not to be junked automatically. I was pleased to see that his new book has two chapters on Nollywood whereas his past books on African cinema ignored this iconic genre because, according to him: 'The images scattered to the wind in Nollywood films are continually relegated to the rubbish bin by celluloid film standards' (p. 279). Gloria Emeagwali alerted me to the controversial nature of the new book when she questioned online why the author obsesses with trash and why there is no distinction between the people and trash in the book.
Having read the book, I admit that the author has an original thesis that he argued with varying degrees of conviction mixed with serious doubts. To argue that there are tropes of trash in African cinema is far from the mantra that African cinema is trash or that Africans are 'worthless people'. The author over-generalized his observation of trash in some scenes by concluding that such trash is what defines the films, the culture, the politics, the law and the people. 'What is worthless? Who is trash?' He asks provocatively (p. 57). No one is worthless, and everything is not trash should be the answers.
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