Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-skm99 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T06:35:28.867Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Aesthetics of Ugliness in Ibibio Dramatic Arts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

Aesthetics is certainly not an easy concept to define or explain. The numerous problems often associated with identifying the aesthetic in terms of the properties of its particular objects, arts and culture, largely account for this difficulty. And so relative, open-ended and complex is aesthetics that philosophers, scholars and aestheticians, since Plato's time, are still far from reaching a definitive consensus about its properties, application and meaning. In its general application to the arts, the inherent criterial problems of aesthetics appear to be heightened and made even more complex by the fact that some works of art, like sculpture, consist of physical objects; others, like poetry and music, consist of verbal and gestural behavior and imagined and non-physical objects, even though poetry and music can at times consist of physical objects; and others still, like dance and drama, consist of kinesis and a variable combination of some or all of the other properties.

Generally, it should be correct to say that aesthetics is an articulated value concept, a relative and qualitative experience that is diffused throughout nature and the arts, and throughout human experience and behavior, even though the congeries of its qualities and coordinates are often irreducible in language and analysis. Aesthetics can, therefore, apply to the “theories about the nature of art as well as about the criteria of aesthetic judgement” (Wolff 1983, 27). This argument by Janet Wolff is based on the inherent relationship between an art concept and its corresponding aesthetic theory on the one hand, and on the relationship between a preferred or “adopted” aesthetic theory and the corresponding criteria for its application and analysis:

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Achebe, Chinua. 1958. Things Fall Apart. London: Heineman.Google Scholar
Akpaide, U. Uko. 1982. “Ibibio Concept of the Mask,” Nigeria Magazine 141: 2429.Google Scholar
Boston, J. S. 1960. “Some Northern Ibo Masquerades,” Journal of the Royal African Institute 90: 54–5.Google Scholar
Ebong, Inih A. 1980. “The Performing Arts and Community Education and Recreation in Africa,” Umoja 4/2: 8597.Google Scholar
Ebong, Inih A. 1990. “Drama and Theatre among the Ibibio of South-eastern Nigeria: A Case Study of Utuekpe or Ekoong Drama.” Ph.D. Diss. University of Birmingham, England.Google Scholar
Esen, A.J A. 1982. Ibibio Profile. Calabar: Paico Press.Google Scholar
Ita, Bassey. 1975. “Idibi Akpan Adiama: The Efik Falstaff.” Sunday Chronicle, 23 February, p.12.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, M.D.W. 1951. “The Ekong Players,” Eastern Anthropologist 5, September-November: 4147.Google Scholar
Ladd, John. 1973. “Conceptual Problems Relating to the Comparative Study of Art” in d'Azevedo, Warren L. (ed.) The Traditional Artist in African Societies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 417–24.Google Scholar
Macebuh, Stanley. 1974. “African Aesthetics in Traditional African Art,” Okike 5: 1324.Google Scholar
Messenger, John C. 1971. “Ibibio Drama,” Africa 41/3: 208–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Messenger, John C. 1973. “The Carver in Annang Society,” in d'Azevedo, Warren L. (ed.) The Traditional Artist in African Societies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 101–27.Google Scholar
Nzekwu, Onuora. 1981. “Masquerade,” in Ogunbiyi, Yemi (ed.) Drama and Theatre in Nigeria: A Critical Source Book. Lagos: Nigeria Magazine, pp. 131–35.Google Scholar
Obiechina, Emmanuel N. 1978. “Literature-Traditional and Modern-in the Nsukka Environment,” in Ofomata, G.E.K. (ed.) The Nsukka Environment. Enugu: Fourth Dimension Publishers.Google Scholar
Okpewho, Isidore. 1979. The Epic in Africa: Toward a Poetics of the Oral Performance. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Sieber, Roy. 1973. “Approaches to Non-Western Art,” in d'Azevedo, Warren (ed.) The Traditional Artist in African Societies. Bloomington University Press, pp. 425–34.Google Scholar
Simmons, D.C. 1957. “The Depiction of Gangosa on Efik-Ibibio Masks,” Man 57/18: 1720.Google Scholar
Ukut, Ebong U. c. 1977. “Ekpo Society,” Heritage 1: 39.Google Scholar
Wolff, Janet. 1983. Aesthetics and the Sociology of Art. London: George Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar