Abstract
This article aims to enhance understanding of the changing nature of the pre-colonial,
(neo)colonial and postcolonial imagination of space and time in Africa
and of its organising principle in African cinema. It will focus on the cartographic
and time reckoning techniques and traditions of Africans in precolonial times
in contrast to the space-time imagination expressed in colonial film in Africa,
such as in the instruction documentary Daybreak in Udi (1949). This documentary,
which promotes British colonial self-help development projects in Africa,
tells the story of the building of a maternity home in an Igbo village in Nigeria.
Furthermore, the article will enhance understanding of the cinematic turn to
a counterhegemonic film tradition as a stepping stone to the newly emerging
field of African intercultural philosophical cinema. The time-space imagination
in Common Threads (2018), shortlisted by the Zanzibar International Film Festival
(ZIFF) for the best documentary will be analysed as a case in point. This
documentary concentrates on the nineteenth-century and current Afro-Indian
textile trade, the associated oral narratives and their visual impact on the so-called
Kanga and Vitenge textiles.