Rea!

Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa

Det ursprungliga priset var: 335,00 kr.Det nuvarande priset är: 134,00 kr.

TRYGGT KÖP Handla tryggt hos oss
  • Fri frakt över 499,00 kr
  • 14 dagars ångerrätt & retur
  • 100% säkra betalningar med SSL
  • Kvalitetsgaranti på alla produkter
Visa Mastercard PayPal
Artikelnr: SK0114379-SE20260527-101422 Kategori: Etikett:

Beskrivning

Om boken

Popularized by Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Paul Simon, the ”a cappella” music known as ”isicathamiya” has become celebrated as one of South Africa’s most vibrant and distinct performance traditions. This text provides an interpretation of isicathamiya performance practice and its relation to the culture and consciousness of the Zulu migrant labourers who largely compose its choirs. In songs and dances, the performers oppose the class and racial oppression that reduces them to ”labour units.” At the same time, Erlmann argues, the performers rework dominant images to symbolically reconstruct their ”home,” an imagined world of Zulu rural tradition and identity. By contrasting the live performance of isicathamiya to its reproduction in mass media, recordings and international concerts, Erlmann addresses issues in performance studies and anthropology, and looks to the future of isicathamiya live performance in the new South Africa.

Åtkomstkoder och digitalt tilläggsmaterial garanteras inte med begagnade böcker

Mer om Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa (1996)

1996 släpptes boken Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa skriven av Veit Erlmann. Det är den 2a upplagan av kursboken. Den är skriven på engelska och består av 462 sidor. Förlaget bakom boken är University of Chicago.

Köp boken Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa på we och spara pengar.

Tillhör kategorierna

ÖvrigtÖvrigt

Referera till Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa (Upplaga 2)

Harvard

Erlmann, V. (1996). Nightsong : performance, power, and practice in South Africa. 2:a uppl. University of Chicago.