Abstract

In Xala (1975) of Sembene Ousmane, Wend Kuuni (1982) of Gaston Kabore ´, Gombele (1994) of Falaba Issa Traore, Keita (1995) of Dan Koyate, La Petite Vendeuse de Soleil (1998) of Djibril Diop Mambeti, and Khorma (la betise) (2002) of Saadi Jilaani., we analyze the multiple meanings of ''sexual impotence,'' ''albinism,'' ''blindness,'' ''deafness,'' and ''mobility disabilities.'' We analyze how context, stigmatization, and im- pact on the story invite a reflection. Disability is understood as loss but also the possibility for regeneration (in Xala), as genuinely ''accepting gifts from God'' (in Wend Kuuni), the ordinariness of disabled people and others' misguided perception of them (in Gombele), ''learning your name'' and overcoming barriers (in Keita), enlightening a rather dark world (in La Petite Vendeuse), and a positive despite people's negative disruptive tendencies (in Khorma). We argue the potential of disability in explicating tensions between traditional and modern, accumulation and loss of power, human and God, special and ordinary. Disability is a particular site of criti- cism that confronts isolation, miscommunication, lack of memory, and reli- gious division. The disabled figures in these films emphasize positive inten- tions, tolerance, insistence, ordinariness and goodness, and the possibility of reversal and transgression.

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