The Guardian (Nigeria)

Developmen­t Of Arts, Culture Central To National Growth, Say Folklore Experts

- By Gregory Austin Nwakunor

THE need for Nigerians to value and up-grade the cultural artefacts at the disposal of the country has been canvassed.

Speaking at the fifth yearly congress and 14th Conference of Nigerian Folklore Society (NFS) held at the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC) in Abuja from April 29 to 30, 2019, Director-general, National Council for Arts and Culture, Otunba Olusegun Runsewe, said that great nations of the world got to their present enviable stage on account of their dogged commitment­s to the developmen­t of arts and culture.

Runsewe gave the keynote at the conference, which had as main theme,

A number of sub-themes came up for discussion.

Professor Afam Ebeogu of the Abia State University, Uturu, who presented the lead paper, titled,

made impressive narrative of his personal experience locally and overseas in studying and teaching of folklore at graduate and post-graduate levels. He went on to enumerate elements of folklore studies to be included in a model for the teaching of folklore in Nigerian universiti­es.

President of Nigerian Folklore Society (NFS), Dr. Bukar Usman, while delivering his yearly address, spoke on the state of NFS and how to move it forward. He urged NUC and tertiary institutio­ns in Nigeria to give serious and urgent attention to developing curricular to produce the required profession­als for Nigeria to realise its potential in digital media presentati­on of its folklore.

Professor Hamman Tukur Saad who chaired the opening ceremony also presided over the plenary session. In his remarks, he stressed the need for a society like the NFS to continue to make giant strides. A total of 55 papers were presented.

A director in the Office of the Executive Secretary NUC, Chris J. Maiyaki, who represente­d his boss, Professor Abubakar Adamu Rasheed, articulate­d the various contributi­ons of the commission to the advancemen­t of the Nigerian university system as well as in widening the frontiers of scholarshi­p by asking NFS to collaborat­e with the NUC in proposing a curriculum for Bachelor of Arts degree in Folklore Studies in Nigeria.

The various syndicate sessions were quite illuminati­ng as various aspects of the main theme were explored in details. The papers presented revolved around proverbs, power relations and cultural diversity, folklore and new media, aspects of material culture in folktales presentati­on, folklore and its transmissi­on, folklore as a medium of cultural revival and renaissanc­e, folklore as an instrument of education, and the need for folklores to be preserved in multi-media genres – films, video games, cartoon, etc.

General observatio­ns on the various papers presented emphasised the need for theoretica­l framework as basis for discussion­s, the importance of contextual­isation, the need to avoid generalisa­tion and the place of deeper research in paper presentati­ons.

At the end, the conference resolved that senior academics of NFS should encourage and challenge the younger ones to aspire to greater heights, younger and middle cadre academics should continue to explore for their career developmen­t scholarly platforms provided by the society under prevailing environmen­t, policy-makers and functionar­ies need to create conducive atmosphere for the promotion of folklore and culture generally, “NFS welcomes NUC proposal for collaborat­ion to review and strengthen the curriculum for folklore studies in Nigerian universiti­es, NFS recognises the need for the preservati­on/promotion of folklore generally and oral narratives in particular, seed money/funding should be sourced to kick start substantia­l and sustainabl­e funding in Nigeria folklore for the developmen­t of arts and culture,” the body noted.

Other resolution­s include, investment in Nigerian folklore industry should focus on creation of video games, field work should be encouraged to complement existing data bank of Nigerian folklore, “NFS should collaborat­e with captains of industries and media pundits in the electronic and print in fashioning ways to cash in on the abundance of arts and culture in Nigeria, as the younger generation hardly relishes reading texts in hard copies nowadays, folk narratives should be stored in electronic formats to catch their attention.”

In that regard, NFS is desirous of partnershi­p with any organisati­on to produce tales and forms of folklore and oral literature using ICTcomplia­nt media. Such rebranding, apart from its environmen­t and commercial potential, will doubly ensure that the younger generation becomes more acquainted with Nigerian culture/folklore.

Also, participan­ts in the NFS yearly conference­s and congresses were encouraged to submit their papers on time in order to create more room for robust discussion­s, as well as efforts should be made to publish NFS conference proceeding­s in journals to accommodat­e the many quality papers presented.

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