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Music, Modernity, and the Global Imagination - South Africa and the West (Hardcover)
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Music, Modernity, and the Global Imagination - South Africa and the West (Hardcover)
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How was Africa seen by the West during the colonial period? How do
Europeans and Americans conceive of Africa in today's postcolonial
era? Such questions have preoccupied anthropologists, historians,
and literary scholars for years. But few have asked the reverse:
how did--and do--Africans see Europe and the United States? Fewer
still have wondered how Western images of Africa and African
representations of the West might mirror one another.
In a detailed study spanning from the late nineteenth century to
the present, renowned anthropologist and ethnomusicologist Veit
Erlmann examines the very creation of a global imagination for
black South Africans, Europeans, and African Americans. To this
end, he explores two striking episodes in the history of black
South African music. The first is a pair of tours made by two black
South African choirs in England and America in the early 1890s; the
second is a series of engagements with the international music
industry as experienced by the premier choral group Ladysmith Black
Mambazo after the release of Paul Simon's celebrated Graceland
album in 1986.
Readers will find the cast of characters involved in these
intertwined and international dramas at once telling and
impressive. Among the many players are African National Congress
co-founder Saul Msane, Queen Victoria, African-American musician
and impresario Orpheus McAdoo, Xhosa Christian prophet Ntsikana, W.
E. B. Du Bois, Michael Jackson, and Spike Lee. Music, Modernity,
and the Global Imagination tells the story of how these artists,
activists, and agents effectively invented each other in travel
diaries, religious hymns, concert performances, music videos,
Broadway plays, and autobiographies. Erlmann also argues that the
resultant mixture of myths and fictions--as distinctly imagined by
these diverse historical actors--entangled South Africa and the
West in ways that often obscured the newly emergent global
imbalances of power, or else blurred the polarities of the colonial
and postcolonial world.
Ultimately, this book reports on a transatlantic dialogue that
carries direct and profound implications for the world's arts and
cultures. It is the black diasporic discussion between South Africa
and the West, and it is a conversation--about society, music, and
Utopia--that is still in progress.
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