{"title":"Blackness in Morocco: Gnawa Identity Through Music and Visual Culture by Cynthia J. Becker (review)","authors":"Cleo Jay","doi":"10.1353/tj.2023.a917495","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Blackness in Morocco: Gnawa Identity Through Music and Visual Culture</em> by Cynthia J. Becker <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Cleo Jay </li> </ul> <em>BLACKNESS IN MOROCCO: GNAWA IDENTITY THROUGH MUSIC AND VISUAL CULTURE</em>. Cynthia J. Becker. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2020; 304 pp. <p>Since the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, North Africa has been the topic of many books and articles, often focused on the role of women and ethnic groups in the revolts. In particular, Amazigh (Berber) minorities have become more visible after years of being marginalized; for example, they achieved official recognition of their languages and specific heritage in several countries. However, very little has been written about Black communities, despite the vibrant, popular Gnawa cultural movement in Morocco. In the racially-charged context of North Africa, Black immigrants from Sub-Saharan Africa often face suspicion and discriminatory practices from majoritarian communities, police forces, and governments. With a growing number of migrants and refugees trying to cross into Europe, North African states are placed under tremendous pressure, and this creates tensions between local communities and new arrivals.</p> <p>Cynthia Becker’s new book, <em>Blackness in Morocco: Gnawa Identity through Music and Visual Culture</em> is a welcome, needed, and topical addition to research on North African identities and contemporary culture. More specifically, it ties performance and music practices to the issue of race and the history of slavery, bringing a new outlook to studies on Gnawa communities and their history. It is an essential read for anyone interested in North African cultural and performance heritage, and, more generally, minority and race studies.</p> <p>Becker takes a fieldwork-focused approach to research, bringing to the fore the voices of minorities that are often excluded from national discourse. She adopts an ethnographic methodology, fully immersing herself within communities for long periods of time and documenting practices that are central to their sense of identity. <em>Blackness in Morocco</em> focuses on Gnawa performance practices and their spiritual rituals, both unique within the North African cultural landscape. Her previous book <em>Amazigh Arts in Morocco: Women Shaping Berber Identity</em> (2006) looked at the quotidian lives of women in marginalized areas, who play a vital role in preserving local dialects and traditions. Some of the key themes of this earlier research reappear here: a focus on marginalized groups, particularly women, and the idea of empowerment through creative or spiritual practices. Becker particularly teases out the ways differences are celebrated through performance, and how African ancestral heritage perpetuates despite postcolonial policies that sought to streamline North African identities around a pan-Arab ideology.</p> <p>‘Gnawa’ in Morocco can carry a number of different meanings: a specific type of musical performance that usually involves drumming, spiritual events, or, more generally, a descriptor for Black Moroccan communities. Gnawa, Becker writes, is “a connection to Blackness…[with] a mythological and symbolic quality”; it is, she continues, a marker both of ‘Otherness’ and authenticity (4), with this latter term understood as emerging through hereditary lines within families of spiritual practitioners and musicians. Descended from Black African slaves, the Gnawa community developed its own codes and rites, different from mainstream Moroccan culture, while, at the same time, playing a very specific role within it. Renowned and sought out specifically for their musical skills and healing powers, Gnawa people inspire respect and awe within majoritarian Moroccan culture.</p> <p>A key strength of Becker’s book is her decades long commitment to the community and her rigorous research process. She spent years attending events and interviewing musicians, spiritual healers, diviners, and other members of the Gnawa community. Becker discusses the Orientalist lens through which Gnawa performances are often viewed, as well as their contemporary commercialization as part of a growing tourist industry. To avoid a voyeuristic position, she adopts a participatory role, fully partaking in the performances and rituals about which she later writes. She also particularly focuses on the experience of female practitioners, notably absent from much of the existing literature. Indeed, <em>Blackness in Morocco</em> includes one of the few contemporary accounts describing a ‘lila,’ spirit possession events that are central to Gnawa spiritual practices. Her work provides us with a rare and detailed insight into these ceremonies, which are usually closed to outsiders, a point to which I return below...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2023.a917495","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Blackness in Morocco: Gnawa Identity Through Music and Visual Culture by Cynthia J. Becker
Cleo Jay
BLACKNESS IN MOROCCO: GNAWA IDENTITY THROUGH MUSIC AND VISUAL CULTURE. Cynthia J. Becker. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2020; 304 pp.
Since the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, North Africa has been the topic of many books and articles, often focused on the role of women and ethnic groups in the revolts. In particular, Amazigh (Berber) minorities have become more visible after years of being marginalized; for example, they achieved official recognition of their languages and specific heritage in several countries. However, very little has been written about Black communities, despite the vibrant, popular Gnawa cultural movement in Morocco. In the racially-charged context of North Africa, Black immigrants from Sub-Saharan Africa often face suspicion and discriminatory practices from majoritarian communities, police forces, and governments. With a growing number of migrants and refugees trying to cross into Europe, North African states are placed under tremendous pressure, and this creates tensions between local communities and new arrivals.
Cynthia Becker’s new book, Blackness in Morocco: Gnawa Identity through Music and Visual Culture is a welcome, needed, and topical addition to research on North African identities and contemporary culture. More specifically, it ties performance and music practices to the issue of race and the history of slavery, bringing a new outlook to studies on Gnawa communities and their history. It is an essential read for anyone interested in North African cultural and performance heritage, and, more generally, minority and race studies.
Becker takes a fieldwork-focused approach to research, bringing to the fore the voices of minorities that are often excluded from national discourse. She adopts an ethnographic methodology, fully immersing herself within communities for long periods of time and documenting practices that are central to their sense of identity. Blackness in Morocco focuses on Gnawa performance practices and their spiritual rituals, both unique within the North African cultural landscape. Her previous book Amazigh Arts in Morocco: Women Shaping Berber Identity (2006) looked at the quotidian lives of women in marginalized areas, who play a vital role in preserving local dialects and traditions. Some of the key themes of this earlier research reappear here: a focus on marginalized groups, particularly women, and the idea of empowerment through creative or spiritual practices. Becker particularly teases out the ways differences are celebrated through performance, and how African ancestral heritage perpetuates despite postcolonial policies that sought to streamline North African identities around a pan-Arab ideology.
‘Gnawa’ in Morocco can carry a number of different meanings: a specific type of musical performance that usually involves drumming, spiritual events, or, more generally, a descriptor for Black Moroccan communities. Gnawa, Becker writes, is “a connection to Blackness…[with] a mythological and symbolic quality”; it is, she continues, a marker both of ‘Otherness’ and authenticity (4), with this latter term understood as emerging through hereditary lines within families of spiritual practitioners and musicians. Descended from Black African slaves, the Gnawa community developed its own codes and rites, different from mainstream Moroccan culture, while, at the same time, playing a very specific role within it. Renowned and sought out specifically for their musical skills and healing powers, Gnawa people inspire respect and awe within majoritarian Moroccan culture.
A key strength of Becker’s book is her decades long commitment to the community and her rigorous research process. She spent years attending events and interviewing musicians, spiritual healers, diviners, and other members of the Gnawa community. Becker discusses the Orientalist lens through which Gnawa performances are often viewed, as well as their contemporary commercialization as part of a growing tourist industry. To avoid a voyeuristic position, she adopts a participatory role, fully partaking in the performances and rituals about which she later writes. She also particularly focuses on the experience of female practitioners, notably absent from much of the existing literature. Indeed, Blackness in Morocco includes one of the few contemporary accounts describing a ‘lila,’ spirit possession events that are central to Gnawa spiritual practices. Her work provides us with a rare and detailed insight into these ceremonies, which are usually closed to outsiders, a point to which I return below...
摩洛哥的黑人:Cynthia J. Becker 所著的《通过音乐和视觉文化看 Gnawa 特性》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 摩洛哥的黑人:Cynthia J. Becker 著 Cleo Jay BLACKNESS IN MOROCCO: GNAWA IDENTITY THROUGH MUSIC AND VISUAL CULTURE.Cynthia J. Becker.明尼阿波利斯:明尼阿波利斯:明尼苏达大学出版社,2020 年;304 页。自 2011 年 "阿拉伯之春 "起义以来,北非一直是许多书籍和文章的主题,这些书籍和文章通常关注妇女和种族群体在起义中的作用。特别是,阿马齐格(柏柏尔)少数民族在被边缘化多年后变得更加引人注目;例如,他们的语言和特殊遗产在一些国家获得了官方承认。然而,尽管摩洛哥的格纳瓦文化运动生机勃勃、广受欢迎,但有关黑人社区的报道却寥寥无几。在北非充满种族歧视的背景下,来自撒哈拉以南非洲的黑人移民经常面临来自多数族群、警察部队和政府的怀疑和歧视。随着越来越多的移民和难民试图进入欧洲,北非国家承受着巨大的压力,这也造成了当地社区与新移民之间的紧张关系。辛西娅-贝克尔的新书《摩洛哥的黑人》:通过音乐和视觉文化展现格纳瓦人的身份认同》是对北非身份认同和当代文化研究的有益补充,既受人欢迎,又有现实需要。更具体地说,该书将表演和音乐实践与种族问题和奴隶制历史联系起来,为有关格纳瓦社区及其历史的研究带来了新的视角。对于任何对北非文化和表演遗产感兴趣的人,以及对少数民族和种族研究感兴趣的人来说,这是一本不可多得的读物。贝克尔采用以实地考察为重点的研究方法,将往往被排除在国家话语之外的少数民族的声音带到人们面前。她采用人种学的方法,长时间完全沉浸在社区中,记录对其身份认同感至关重要的习俗。摩洛哥的黑人》一书重点介绍了格纳瓦人的表演习俗及其精神仪式,这两种习俗在北非文化景观中都是独一无二的。她之前的著作《摩洛哥的阿马齐格艺术》(Amazigh Arts in Morocco:摩洛哥的阿马齐格艺术:塑造柏柏尔人身份的妇女》(2006 年)探讨了边缘化地区妇女的日常生活,她们在保护当地方言和传统方面发挥着至关重要的作用。这项早期研究的一些关键主题在本报告中再次出现:关注边缘化群体,尤其是妇女,以及通过创造性或精神实践增强能力的理念。贝克尔特别揭示了通过表演赞美差异的方式,以及尽管后殖民政策试图围绕泛阿拉伯意识形态简化北非人的身份,但非洲祖先的遗产如何得以延续。在摩洛哥,"格纳瓦 "有多种不同的含义:一种特定类型的音乐表演,通常涉及击鼓、精神活动,或者更广泛地说,是对摩洛哥黑人社区的描述。贝克尔写道,"格纳瓦 "是 "与黑人的一种联系......[具有]神话和象征意义";她接着说,"格纳瓦 "既是 "他者 "的标志,也是真实性的标志(4)。作为非洲黑人奴隶的后裔,格纳瓦社区发展出了自己的规范和仪式,与摩洛哥主流文化不同,同时又在摩洛哥主流文化中扮演着非常特殊的角色。格纳瓦人因其音乐技能和治愈能力而闻名于世,在摩洛哥主流文化中备受尊重和敬畏。贝克尔这本书的一个主要优点是她几十年来一直致力于该社区的工作,并进行了严格的研究。她花了数年时间参加各种活动,采访音乐家、精神治疗师、占卜师和其他格纳瓦社区成员。贝克尔讨论了人们通常从东方主义的视角来看待格纳瓦表演,以及当代格纳瓦表演作为日益增长的旅游业的一部分而被商业化的问题。为了避免窥视的立场,她采用了参与式的角色,完全融入到她后来撰写的表演和仪式中。她还特别关注女性从业者的经历,这在大部分现有文献中都是罕见的。事实上,《摩洛哥的黑人》是当代为数不多的描述 "里拉 "的作品之一,"里拉 "是格纳瓦精神习俗的核心,是灵魂附体事件。她的作品让我们对这些通常不对外人开放的仪式有了罕见而详细的了解,这一点我将在下文中再谈......
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For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.