“Sounding” the System: Noise, In/Security and the Politics of Citizenship

IF 0.2 0 MUSIC
Sonjah N. Stanley Niaah
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The instruments of nation, their creators and enforcers (the system) in the postcolonial Caribbean have never been favourable in their intentions toward the way the masses have lived and had their being. In various sectors of life, particularly entertainment, little or no space was made available through this system which included legislative suppression tantamount to cultural erasure. However, another system emerged. Blacks have always had their bodies, creating sounds, often significantly amplified, in contravention of the system supported by state laws. Accounting for systems of eradication which surrounded black entertainment, this article foregrounds the sound system as representation. Sound is used as a signifier, mobilized in opposition to the politics of “noise” and thus an act—as in “sounding”, a verb, a philosophy of doing, of resistance, much like “grounding”. “Sounding” is articulated as a practice, a form of productive labour, complementary to the labour of citizenship, of nation-building, and celebration of the human. Drawing on examples from Jamaica, and located at the intersection of cultural history, cultural geography, and cultural studies more broadly, this article continues exploration of Black Atlantic performance geography by placing entertainment practice in a wider comparative and analytical field at the heart of sound revolutions across the African Diaspora.
“发声”系统:噪音、内/安全与公民政治
后殖民加勒比地区的国家工具、创造者和执行者(制度)对群众的生活方式和存在方式的意图从来都不是有利的。在生活的各个部门,特别是娱乐部门,通过这一制度几乎没有或根本没有空间,其中包括相当于文化抹杀的立法压制。然而,另一个系统出现了。黑人总是有自己的身体,制造声音,通常会被大大放大,这违反了州法律支持的制度。考虑到围绕黑人娱乐的根除系统,本文以音响系统为代表。声音被用作一种能指,被动员起来反对“噪音”的政治,从而成为一种行为——就像“发声”,一个动词,一种做事的哲学,一种反抗的哲学,很像“接地气”。“发声”被阐述为一种实践,一种生产劳动形式,与公民身份、国家建设和人类庆典的劳动相辅相成。本文以牙买加为例,位于文化史、文化地理和更广泛的文化研究的交叉点,通过将娱乐实践置于更广泛的比较和分析领域,继续探索黑大西洋表演地理,这是整个非洲侨民声音革命的核心。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Journal of World Popular Music is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes research and scholarship on recent issues and debates surrounding international popular musics, also known as World Music, Global Pop, World Beat or, more recently, World Music 2.0. The journal provides a forum to explore the manifestations and impacts of post-globalizing trends, processes, and dynamics surrounding these musics today. It adopts an open-minded perspective, including in its scope any local popularized musics of the world, commercially available music of non-Western origin, musics of ethnic minorities, and contemporary fusions or collaborations with local ‘traditional’ or ‘roots’ musics with Western pop and rock musics. Placing specific emphasis on contemporary, interdisciplinary, and international perspectives, the journal’s special features include empirical research and scholarship into the global creative and music industries, the participants of World Music, the musics themselves and their representations in all media forms today, among other relevant themes and issues; alongside explorations of recent ideas and perspectives from popular music, ethnomusicology, anthropology, musicology, communication, media and cultural studies, sociology, geography, art and museum studies, and other fields with a scholarly focus on World Music. The journal also features special, guest-edited issues that bring together contributions under a unifying theme or geographical area.
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