|
|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Reggae Stories provides a range of perspectives on the development
of Jamaican popular music and culture, in particular reggae and
dancehall, and opens the door to new debates on these music forms
and their producers and creators. It moves through early musical
debates and incendiary intellectual contributions in Jamaican
reggae to trace Jamaican popular music in new geographical locales,
and then returns home to contemporary dancehall posturing. The
contributors to this collection incorporate a range of approaches
that include cultural studies, musicological analysis, lyrical
analysis and historical contextualization. The collection makes a
seminal contribution with its presentation of significant work on
reggae music in the Hispanic Caribbean (Mexico), particularly for
the benefit of English speakers who may have faced restrictions in
accessing such material. In a similar vein, the work also
introduces material on reggae music in the former Soviet Union
(Belarus), again opening spaces that may have been hidden from the
anglophone debates. The work also makes another significant
contribution in tackling Peter Tosh's intellectual and lyrical
legacy as a reggae revolutionary in an era where he has received
scant literary and academic attention. Additionally, the work adds
considerably to contemporary debates on dancehall music and
culture's post-millennial identity debates by introducing a
critical academic discourse on the lyrical and cultural posturing
of popular dancehall artistes Tommy Lee and Vybz Kartel.
ReggaeStories spans several important and connected points in the
debates around adoption and adaptation of Jamaican popular music
and culture in different cultural and geographical contexts and
extends the discussion on how these musical and cultural forms have
been transformed or retained in differing localities.
Reggae and Dancehall music and culture have travelled far beyond
the shores of the tiny island of Jamaica to find their respective
places as new genres of music and lifestyle. In Reggae from Yaad,
Donna Hope pulls together a remarkable cast of contributors
offering contemporary interpretations of the history, culture,
significance and social dynamics of Jamaican Popular Music from
varying geographical and disciplinary locations. From Alan 'Skill'
Cole's lively and frank account of the Bob Marley he knew and David
Katz's conversation with veteran music producers Bunny 'Striker'
Lee, King Jammy and Bobby Digital; to Heather Augustyn and Shara
Rambarran who both explore the role of music in the relationship
between Britain and Jamaica in the post-independence 1960s, the
contributors bring a new dimension to the discussion on the impact
of Jamaican music. Drawn from a selection of presentations at the
2013 International Reggae Conference in Kingston, Jamaica, Reggae
from Yaad continues the ever-evolving discourse on the meaning
behind the music and the cultural and social developments that
inform Jamaican Popular Music. Contributors: Heather Augustyn -
Winston C. Campbell - Alan 'Skill' Cole - Brent Hagerman - Patrick
Helber - Donna P. Hope - David Katz - Anna Kasafi Perkins - Shara
Rambarran - Jose Luis Fanjul Rivero - Livingston A. White
International Reggae is an edited volume emanating from the
International Reggae Conference hosted annually by the Institute of
Caribbean Studies Unit at the University of the West Indies, Mona.
Like the conference, this work seeks to consolidate and disseminate
knowledge on Jamaican music and associated music forms.
This work provides an accessible account of a poorly understood
aspect of Jamaican popular culture. It explores the socio-political
meanings of Jamaica's dancehall culture. In particular, the book
gives an account of the power relations within the dancehall and
between the dancehall and the wider Jamaican society. Hope gives
the reader an unmatched insider's view and explanation of power,
violence and gender relations in Jamaica as seen through the prism
of the dancehall.
|
You may like...
Astro Girl
Ken Wilson-Max
Hardcover
(1)
R352
R317
Discovery Miles 3 170
Space
Paperback
R66
R42
Discovery Miles 420
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.