Chú thích Mặt nạ truyền thống châu Phi

  1. Fauvism Lưu trữ 2011-08-11 tại Wayback Machine at Art Snap
  2. “A Short History of Carnival with a Touch of Africa”. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 17 tháng 10 năm 2011. Truy cập ngày 15 tháng 3 năm 2020.
  3. This idea has been literally portrayed in the well-known novel Things Fall Apart by Nigerian writer Chief Chinua Achebe. While the author hints at the importance of the masks themselves in the same novel, masked elders are particularly hostile towards the missionaries, a symbolic representation of the opposition of traditional Nigerian culture (as represented by the mask-spirits) and the new values brought along by European Christians.
  4. Analogies between Nigerian ceremonies and the theatre of Ancient Greece (as well as the Western theatre in general) have been developed by the Nobel Prize winning Nigerian writer Chief Wole Soyinka. Soyinka wrote dramas based on the Yoruba traditions and, conversely, he has "africanized" classical works of the Western theatre such as Euripides' The Bacchae or Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny Opera.
  5. See Faces of the Spirit

Tài liệu tham khảo

WikiPedia: Mặt nạ truyền thống châu Phi http://www.vub.ac.be/BIBLIO/nieuwenhuysen/african-... http://crawfurd.dk/africa/carnival.htm http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20011119085053/http:... http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20011125101040/http:... http://artsnap.org/category/fauvism/ http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/pwmn_3/hd_pwmn_3.... http://etudesettravaux.iksiopan.pl/images/etudtrav... http://www.rebirth.co.za/african_mask_basic_forms.... https://archive.is/20121215055527/http://cti.itc.v... https://archive.is/20130122145111/http://www.essor...