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Sounds of Other Shores

The Musical Poetics of Identity on Kenya's Swahili Coast

Andrew J. Eisenberg

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Wesleyan University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Musik

Beschreibung

Sounds of Other Shores takes an ethnographic ear to the history of transoceanic stylistic appropriation in the Swahili taarab music of the Kenyan coast. Swahili taarab, a form of sung poetry that emerged as East Africa's first mass-mediated popular music in the 1930s, is a famously cosmopolitan form, rich in audible influences from across the Indian Ocean. But the variants of the genre that emerged in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa during the twentieth century feature particularly dramatic, even flamboyant, appropriations of Indian and Arab sonic gestures and styles. Combining oral history, interpretive ethnography, and musical analysis, Sounds of Other Shores explores how Swahili-speaking Muslims in twentieth-century Mombasa derived pleasure and meaning from acts of transoceanic musical appropriation, arguing that these acts served as ways of reflecting on and mediating the complexities and contradictions associated with being "Swahili" in colonial and postcolonial Kenya. The result is a musical anthropology of Kenyan Swahili subjectivity that reframes longstanding questions about Swahili identity while contributing to broader discussions about identity and citizenship in Africa and the Indian Ocean world.

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Schlagwörter

Sound studies, voice, identity, ethnicity, ethnography, interrelation, Kenya, Swahili coast, Mombasa, Swahili hip hop, musical anthropology, Early Recorded Taarab, Humanism, Indian Ocean music, music, poetics, African music, transoceanic musical appropriation, African cultural studies, music poetry, Indian, Arab, Muslim, sonic culture, acoustemology, musical poetics, transoceanic