Tableau Ferraille
Tells the story of an idealistic young politician’s rise and fall. Daam, a well-intentioned but vacillating European-trained politician must choose between two social paradigms exemplified by his two wives. The first, Gagnesiri, is the village beauty, who waits patiently for Daam. Unfortunately, they are unable to conceive a child, so Daam takes European-educated Kiné, who is eager to get ahead by marrying a politician. Daam becomes involved in a shady business deal with Président, a local businessman; when the details are made public, he is forced out in disgrace.
Tableau Ferraille offers an intimate view of how modernization, at least as practiced in today’s Africa, corrodes traditional communities and retards grassroots development. Like such past Senegalese masterpieces as Ousmane Sembene’s Xala and Djibril Diop Mambety’s Hyenas, it deplores a corrupt post-colonial elite’s exploitation of the promise of African independence.
