- Collection:
- Africana Digital Ethnography Project (ADEPt)
- Title:
- The Language Agenda in Post-Colonial African Music
- Creator:
- Carter-Enyi, Quintina
- Date of Original:
- 2018-03-15
- Subject:
- African languages
Postcolonialism
African literature - Location:
- United States, Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, 33.749, -84.38798
- Medium:
- transcripts
- Type:
- Text
- Format:
- application/pdf
- Description:
- For post-colonial African musicians, decolonization became an imperative. For musicians, singing in ones native language was no longer merely creative expression, it took on a more significant role in decolonizing the African continent. This was also the case for composers, particularly those who traveled abroad to study in conservatories and universities in the United Kingdom or the United States of America. In Decolonising the Mind, Ngugi wa Thiongo makes a case for African literature to be written in African languages. He also points out that singers and musicians have resisted mental colonization by retaining indigenous musical practices and promoting innovation in those same practice The peasantry and the urban working class threw up singers. These sang the old songs or composed new ones incorporating the new experiences in industries and urban life and in working-class struggle and organisations. These singers pushed the languages to new limits, renewing and reinvigorating them by coining new words and new expressions, and in generally expanding their capacity to incorporate new happenings in Africa and the world (1986:23). In essence, throughout the colonial period and beyond, African musicians have used music as a tool for sustaining indigenous culture, including preserving languages, and ultimately as a means of post-colonial reclamation of culture and identity. However, Africa is not the same as it was before colonization. For one thing, Africa has emerged as a post-colonial patchwork of different nations that reflect colonial domination more than indigenous civilization. Many people are now Christians and societies are increasingly urbanized and cosmopolitan, reflecting massive population growth and globalized economies. In ruminating on this reality, African musicians creatively responded to new experiences, innovating their cultures for the post-colonial future. For African societies to create a new cultural experience, while at the same time, prevent further loss of their heritage. This paper will explore emphasis on African languages by African musicians as a form of agenda setting, priming and framing as theorized by Scheufele (2000). Specifically, I will offer three case studies, one from literary sources (Miriam Makeba), one from the literary sources and personal fieldwork (Laz Ekwueme), and one recent example from personal fieldwork (the Forum for Inculturation of Liturgical Music, or FILM). The perspective of singing in ones native language (and other African languages) as an intentional act of decolonization is reflected in all three case studies presented in this paper. Keywords: African Languages and Societies; African Studies; Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics; Applied Linguistics; Critical and Cultural Studies; Ethnomusicology; Folklore; Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Communication; Linguistic Anthropology; Social and Cultural Anthropology; Social Influence and Political Communication.
- External Identifiers:
- Metadata URL:
- http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/adept.mul:0004
- Language:
- eng
- Additional Rights Information:
- All works in this collection are protected by copyright. For more information or to request a use not granted under the Copyright Educational Use Statement from rightsstatements.org, please contact Aaron Carter-Enyi (aaron.carterenyi@morehouse.edu) with the web URL or handle identification number.
- Original Collection:
- Africana Digital Ethnography Project: Multicultural Materials
- Holding Institution:
- Morehouse College (Atlanta, Ga.)
- Rights:
-