International Journal of African Society, Cultures and Traditions (IJASCT)

Costume

Costume as Transitional Phenomenon: A Psychoanalytic Reading of Kenneth Eni’s Pebbles (Published)

This article explored costume in Kenneth Eni’s “Pebbles” through a psychoanalytic framework grounded in Donald Winnicott’s concepts of transitional phenomena, potential space, and the holding environment. While African theatre scholarship has often emphasized costume as a cultural or semiotic signifier, this study argued that costume also functions as a psycho-affective mediator that enables play and identity negotiation. Using close textual and performance analysis, the article examined four key costume moments: the half-dress liminality of rehearsal, Ese’s contested triangular garment, the militant youths’ masquerade, and the women’s dance attire in the reconciliatory finale. Situated within the allegorical Garbage Kingdom, costumes are shown to operate as transitional objects simultaneously “me and not-me” mediating between vulnerability and authority, aggression and reconciliation. By tracing a theoretical genealogy from Freud’s unconscious and repression, through Jung’s collective archetypes, to Winnicott’s transitional play, and grounding it in Campbell’s insights on performance, the study bridged psychoanalysis and African theatre studies. It concluded that costume in “Pebbles” is not static decoration but a dynamic medium through which societies project anxieties, sustain paradox, and rehearse renewal.

Keywords: Costume, Psychoanalysis, holding environment, potential space, transitional phenomenon

PAN-AFRICAN ARTISTIC REFLECTIONS IN KWAME NKRUMAH MEMORIAL PARK (Published)

This paper attempts to make an in-depth visual analysis of the monumental freestanding sculptures at the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park (KNMP) and the frieze that clothes the museum next to his figurative sepulchre to establish its symbiotically symbolic relationship with the coalesced adinkralization (using adinkra motif designs) and Egyptology in promoting the African nationality and unification agenda. Again, it addresses some wider politico-cultural metaphorism and rhetorical issues emerging from the freestanding sculptural arrangements in the entire park resulting from the intercourse of Egypto-Ghana artistic cultural exegesis. It also examines the costuming of the sculptures in blending Egyto-Ghana dress culture in projecting the ideologies of Nkrumah’s proposed common continental African unitary government

Keywords: Adinkralization, Costume, Egyptology, Pan-African Aesthetics, Symbology, Unity

Scroll to Top

Don't miss any Call For Paper update from EA Journals

Fill up the form below and get notified everytime we call for new submissions for our journals.