Skip to content
RAI FILM
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
RAI FILM
Login
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Login
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Films
found one film
Directors
“Shuffield, Robin”
x
films with a digital version
1
Region
West Africa
1
Country
Ivory Coast
1
Keywords
Dance / Theatre / Performance
1
Health / Health care / Healing
1
Social participation
1
Directors
Lancker, Laurent Van
1
Shuffield, Robin
1
x
Series
not set
1
Country of production
Belgium
1
Year of production
1998
1
Film
Ymako
1998
52
‘
Directed by
Laurent Van Lancker
Robin Shuffield
.
Ymako Teatri, a theatre company based in the Ivory Coast, uses street theatre to question some contemporary West African problems. Their originality consists in using the ‘invisible theatre’ method in order to surprise the public and thus make it react itself to its own problems. This documentary shows how a local theatre company efficiently uses fiction to problematise today’s African reality. This film presents two performances, one criticises the current proliferation of religious sects, the other deals with the awakening of villagers towards AIDS. Ymako, in Bambara, means ‘our concerns’.
West Africa
Dance / Theatre / Performance
Health / Health care / Healing
Social participation
One Response
Pingback:
Dr Cai Hua – Royal Anthropological Institute
One Response