1 “Shot a Batty Boy”: Gender, Homophobia, and the Reggae

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 “Shot a Batty Boy”: Gender, Homophobia, and the Reggae “Shot a Batty Boy”: Gender, Homophobia, and the Reggae Music Market in Postcolonial Europe * sonia sabelli In the last years, the dislocation of reggae music, and its relocation into postcolonial Europe, has given rise to an international controversy about the misogyny and homophobia widespread in the dancehall yards: from Jamaica to European multiethnic cities. In this paper I will address this debate, to see how sex and power relationships are represented in reggae nowadays. Spreading out from its Caribbean origins, reggae has shifted from being the cry for justice of black sufferers in the colonized countries, to being the cry for pride and redemption of black immigrants in the overdeveloped countries. It has also attracted white Europeans inspired by the critical and subversive potential of this musical genre, coming to amplify the voice of Italian youth countercultures as well. After the Second World War, a massive emigration began from the British Caribbeans to the UK, opening the way for the incorporation of reggae music into the global economy of the multinational entertainment industry. Emigration ensured a major market to Jamaican music and the sound systems were British Jamaicans’ main means to maintain a link with the motherland. Actually, sound systems are the cheapest way to make music: all you need is a box of records and big and powerful speakers. This is one of the reasons why sound systems became so popular in Italy, several years later. The early Jamaican emigration consisted mainly of young men with no skills and no money, rejected by society because of their skin colour, and looked down upon because, in order to survive, they were not over-particular in their choices. As the Black Uhuru state, there is «A very thin line to start the crime», thus «The youth of Eglington/Won't put down their Remington», as well as «the youth of Kingston», because «They are responsible for a lot of children/And they need food/And they want to go to school». This song is the forerunner for the topos of the “bad man”, whose violence is justified because he is a “victim” of the system. This is also the case in Beenie Man’s Bad Man («Bad man and dat is who I am/Bad man I hope you’ll overstand/That circumstances made me who I am»). The emergence of mods, punks and skinheads (at the end of the ‘60s) represent the responses given by the white youth to the presence of a black community in England. 1 In this scene Dandy * Paper presented at the 7th European Feminist Research Conference – Gendered Cultures at the Crossroads of Imagination, Knowledge and Politics, Utrecht University, The Nederlands, June 4-7, 2009 1 Livingston recorded Rudy, A Message To You , where the figure of the “rude boy” made its first appearance. This archetype of rebellion will pave the way for the role model of the “bad man” with a gun, who will «shot the batty boy» during the ‘90s, provoking an international debate between the advocates of singers’ freedom of speech and Jamaicans’ cultural sovereignty on one hand, and the defenders of LGBTQ rights on the other. 2 The “bad man” – which embodies the antagonist of the sheriff (that Marley wanted to shot) – will also contribute to white European youth's involvement with reggae music, because it asks for equal rights and justice, assuring that it is possible to refuse to be what the Babylon system wants you to be, and pushing you to emancipate yourself from mental slavery. Reggae voices the global ghetto youth’s claim for redemption and amplifies their local practices of resistance against the system. The explosion of the Italian sound system culture was marked by a strong militant stance, since it arose simultaneously with the emergence of occupied social centres (at the end of the ‘80s), and the student protest called “Pantera” (in 1990). To build your own sound system meant to create a space – the dancehall yard – that was outside the rules of the entertainment industry and the “slavery” of paid work in a capitalist society: a space where you could be free and express yourself. In the meanwhile, in Jamaica there was a re-emergence of Rastafarianism and homophobia, as a consequence of what was perceived as a misappropriation of an exclusively ethnic, Jamaican style, by white people that – unlike the British youth – still hadn’t faced the presence of an immigrant community, nor of a black subculture, in their own country. Rastafarianism had given a self-affirming identity to the migrant communities in the UK, but it has also prevented women’s participation in social and political life. The traditional Rastafarian beliefs impose many restrictions to women: they are supposed to serve their husbands and to engage in sex only for the purpose of reproduction. Any other sexual practice is forbidden, and homosexuality is considered unnatural. Given these premises, there is nothing surprising about the marginalization of women in reggae music and about the homophobic attitude of this scene. Although women are the main topic in reggae music, the perspective is predominantly male and sexist, even if the one who speaks is a woman. Gender relationships, as they are represented in reggae music, are still grounded on a “colonial mentality” which reflects the master/slave paradigm, whether in Jamaica or in Europe. Masculinity is overemphasized – through the stereotype of the “bad man” who wants to shot the “batty boy” – as a response to the colonial strategy of feminizing the colonized men, in order to dominate them. On the other hand, women are confined to the role of 1 Hebdige, 1979, p. 74 2 Oumano, 2005 2 mothers, in charge to embody the national language and traditions, in opposition with the colonizer country. If they transgress this role, they are considered as “bitches”. The figure of the “mother of creation” is widespread in many songs, that ascribe women the role of building the national identity and preserving its culture and traditions, identifying female subjectivity with motherhood and the motherland. Even female singers continue to embody the same stereotypes: both as mothers, in charge of passing down the national language and traditions, and as symbols of the nation, in charge of defining the borders of Jamaican national culture after the independence from the British Empire. Confining women to the role of mothers and wives, always in a hierarchical relation with men, the stereotype of the “mother of creation” is to sex-gender system as the “house nigger” is to the economy of the plantation: it does not reverse the power relationships inscribed in this system, rather, it contributes to its preservation. According to bell hooks, contemporary cinema divides black women into two categories: “mammies” or “hot bitches”. 3 So far I have focused on the “mammies”, now let’s look for the “bitches”. According to LKJ, «Inglan is a bitch/dere’s no escapin it». In this classic about the difficulties incurred by Jamaican immigrants entering the British labour market, he uses a sexist derogatory term to define the colonizing nation. But doing so, he reverses the gendered parental rhetoric of colonial rule, consisting in a «maternal model of caring for the welfare of indigenous people» and a «paternalistic model of the rigorous disciplining of native children», both used as a strategy to infantilize and feminize the colonized in order to dominate them. 4 Europeans had always «emasculated» the colonized men, who consequently responded by enhancing the manly prerogatives associated with the masters. The Jamaican tradition of toasting has focused on the glorification of the “big bamboo”, overemphasising the virility of the male performer with a representation of hyper-masculinity that is in step with the representation of women as sexual objects. But what happens when one woman consciously acts and performs as a “bitch”? Jamaican singer Lady Saw sings sexually explicit lyrics with her hand touching her vagina, or straddling one of her male fans. She has been criticized for the “slackness” of her language and gestures, but we should interpret her use of the body on the stage as a way to ironically mime the hyper-masculinity of her male counterparts, reversing it in a celebration of hyper-femininity. The nationalist ideology expressed in reggae attributes to women specific functions: mothers, 3 hooks, 1992, chap. 4 4 Gouda, 2001, pp. 11 3 reproducing the nation’s population; keepers of traditional culture; and symbols of the nation. 5 But it also provides a role model for masculinity: men are supposed to defend the nation as well as their own families, which consist of heterosexual couples. Thus, the existence of homosexuality challenges the entire system of race, gender, nationality and heterosexism, which popular music is supposed to reproduce and support. An apparent distinction between Jamaican reggae and its diasporic forms emerged after the explosion of the controversy over homophobia, starting with Buju Banton's release of Boom Bye Bye in 1993, and renewing with his charge of beating a gay man in 2004. In this song the Jamaican singer incited to kill homosexuals with a gun shot («boom bye bye on a batty boy head»), voicing the homophobic attitude widespread in Jamaican culture, where homosexuality is considered a crime, that can be punished with ten years of hard labour. So the pressure on the Jamaican government to change this law, by Western organizations, has been perceived as an imperialist intervention against the island’s cultural sovereignty, as if they are pretending once again to civilize a Third World country
Recommended publications
  • Jamaican Politics, Nationalism, and Musical Culture in Transition, 1974-1984
    University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations Dissertations and Theses 5-18-2007 Between Two Giant Sounds: Jamaican Politics, Nationalism, and Musical Culture in Transition, 1974-1984 Caree Banton University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td Recommended Citation Banton, Caree, "Between Two Giant Sounds: Jamaican Politics, Nationalism, and Musical Culture in Transition, 1974-1984" (2007). University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations. 508. https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/508 This Thesis is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by ScholarWorks@UNO with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Thesis in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights- holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Thesis has been accepted for inclusion in University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Between Two Giant Sounds: Jamaican Politics, Nationalism, and Musical Culture in Transition, 1974 – 1984 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of New Orleans In partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts In History By Caree Ann-Marie Banton B.A. Grambling State University 2005 B.P.A Grambling State University 2005 May 2007 Acknowledgement I would like to thank all the people that facilitated the completion of this work.
    [Show full text]
  • Dancehall Dossier.Cdr
    DANCEHALL DOSSIER STOP M URDER MUSIC DANCEHALL DOSSIER Beenie Man Beenie Man - Han Up Deh Hang chi chi gal wid a long piece of rope Hang lesbians with a long piece of rope Beenie Man Damn I'm dreaming of a new Jamaica, come to execute all the gays I'm dreaming of a new Jamaica, come to execute all the gays Beenie Man Beenie Man - Batty Man Fi Dead Real Name: Anthony M Davis (aka ‘Weh U No Fi Do’) Date of Birth: 22 August 1973 (Queers Must Be killed) All batty man fi dead! Jamaican dancehall-reggae star Beenie All faggots must be killed! Man has personally denied he had ever From you fuck batty den a coppa and lead apologised for his “kill gays” music and, to If you fuck arse, then you get copper and lead [bullets] prove it, performed songs inciting the murder of lesbian and gay people. Nuh man nuh fi have a another man in a him bed. No man must have another man in his bed In two separate articles, The Jamaica Observer newspaper revealed Beenie Man's disavowal of his apology at the Red Beenie Man - Roll Deep Stripe Summer Sizzle concert at James Roll deep motherfucka, kill pussy-sucker Bond Beach, Jamaica, on Sunday 22 August 2004. Roll deep motherfucker, kill pussy-sucker Pussy-sucker:a lesbian, or anyone who performs cunnilingus. “Beenie Man, who was celebrating his Tek a Bazooka and kill batty-fucker birthday, took time to point out that he did not apologise for his gay-bashing lyrics, Take a bazooka and kill bum-fuckers [gay men] and went on to perform some of his anti- gay tunes before delving into his popular hits,” wrote the Jamaica Observer QUICK FACTS “He delivered an explosive set during which he performed some of the singles that have drawn the ire of the international Virgin Records issued an apology on behalf Beenie Man but within gay community,” said the Observer.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spirit of Dancehall: Embodying a New Nomos in Jamaica Khytie K
    The Spirit of Dancehall: embodying a new nomos in Jamaica Khytie K. Brown Transition, Issue 125, 2017, pp. 17-31 (Article) Published by Indiana University Press For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/686008 Access provided by Harvard University (20 Feb 2018 17:21 GMT) The Spirit of Dancehall embodying a new nomos in Jamaica Khytie K. Brown As we approached the vicinity of the tent we heard the wailing voices, dominated by church women, singing old Jamaican spirituals. The heart beat riddim of the drums pulsed and reverberated, giving life to the chorus. “Alleluia!” “Praise God!” Indecipherable glossolalia punctu- ated the emphatic praise. The sounds were foreboding. Even at eleven years old, I held firmly to the disciplining of my body that my Catholic primary school so carefully cultivated. As people around me praised God and yelled obscenely in unknown tongues, giving their bodies over to the spirit in ecstatic dancing, marching, and rolling, it was imperative that I remained in control of my body. What if I too was suddenly overtaken by the spirit? It was par- ticularly disconcerting as I was not con- It was imperative that vinced that there was a qualitative difference between being “inna di spirit I remained in control [of God]” and possessed by other kinds of my body. What if of spirits. I too was suddenly In another ritual space, in the open air, lacking the shelter of a tent, heavy overtaken by the spirit? bass booms from sound boxes. The seis- mic tremors radiate from the center and can be felt early into the Kingston morning.
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Artist
    Sound Master Entertianment Songs by Artist smedenver.com Title Title Title .38 Special 2Pac 4 Him Caught Up In You California Love (Original Version) For Future Generations Hold On Loosely Changes 4 Non Blondes If I'd Been The One Dear Mama What's Up Rockin' Onto The Night Thugz Mansion 4 P.M. Second Chance Until The End Of Time Lay Down Your Love Wild Eyed Southern Boys 2Pac & Eminem Sukiyaki 10 Years One Day At A Time 4 Runner Beautiful 2Pac & Notorious B.I.G. Cain's Blood Through The Iris Runnin' Ripples 100 Proof Aged In Soul 3 Doors Down That Was Him (This Is Now) Somebody's Been Sleeping Away From The Sun 4 Seasons 10000 Maniacs Be Like That Rag Doll Because The Night Citizen Soldier 42nd Street Candy Everybody Wants Duck & Run 42nd Street More Than This Here Without You Lullaby Of Broadway These Are Days It's Not My Time We're In The Money Trouble Me Kryptonite 5 Stairsteps 10CC Landing In London Ooh Child Let Me Be Myself I'm Not In Love 50 Cent We Do For Love Let Me Go 21 Questions 112 Loser Disco Inferno Come See Me Road I'm On When I'm Gone In Da Club Dance With Me P.I.M.P. It's Over Now When You're Young 3 Of Hearts Wanksta Only You What Up Gangsta Arizona Rain Peaches & Cream Window Shopper Love Is Enough Right Here For You 50 Cent & Eminem 112 & Ludacris 30 Seconds To Mars Patiently Waiting Kill Hot & Wet 50 Cent & Nate Dogg 112 & Super Cat 311 21 Questions All Mixed Up Na Na Na 50 Cent & Olivia 12 Gauge Amber Beyond The Grey Sky Best Friend Dunkie Butt 5th Dimension 12 Stones Creatures (For A While) Down Aquarius (Let The Sun Shine In) Far Away First Straw AquariusLet The Sun Shine In 1910 Fruitgum Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Island Music Songlist
    island music songlist We proudly offer a full menu of song choices that rise to any occasion! In addition to the titles listed below, we maintain an expansive, diverse and ever-expanding library to supplement any songs, artists or styles not represented on this list. Our music designers will make every attempt to incorporate the musical requests specified on these sheets as well as any requests made on the day of the function. INSTRUCTIONS: 1) Print your name / party date below; 2) check off your favorite songs and artists in each category; and 3) include your "must play" songs on the "Top 15" worksheet provided (these selections need NOT be from this song list.) Please return your song list to the office via email ([email protected]), fax (808.982.8340) or post (P.O. Box 2267, Kailua-Kona, HI 96745) at least THREE WEEKS prior to your event date! NAME: EVENT DATE: / / q PELE KANE • MAUNALUA TRADITIONAL HAWAIIAN q PILI MAI NO I KA IHU • AMY HANAIALII GILLIOM q AKAKA FALLS • KEALI'I REICHEL q PILI ME KA'U MANU • ISRAEL "IZ" KAMAKAWIWO'OLE q 'ALIKA • GENOA KEAWE q POHAI KEALOHA • HUI 'OHANA q ALOHA 'OE • KEALOHA KONO q PUPU A' O 'EWA • KEALI'I REICHEL q E ALA E • ISRAEL "IZ" KAMAKAWIWO'OLE q ULILI E • MAKUA ROTHMAN q E APO MAI • NATHAN AWEAU q ULUPALAKUA • HUI 'OHANA q E KU'U MORNING DEW • EDDIE KAMAE & SONS OF HAWAII q WAHINE 'ILIKEA • EDDIE KAMAE & SONS OF HAWAII q E KU'U TUTU • RAIATEA q E O MAI • KEALI'I REICHEL SLACK KEY q E PILI MAI • KEALI'I REICHEL q BACKYARD SLACK • SEAN NA'AUAO q EHUEHU MAI NEI 'O MANOA • AARON J.
    [Show full text]
  • Prejudice and Homophobic Violence in Jamaica
    FOR LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDER HUMAN RIGHTS F ALL:2004 WHAT HAPPENED TO “ONE LOVE”? PREJUDICE AND HOMOPHOBIC VIOLENCE IN JAMAICA In May 2004, Amnesty International issued a report documenting a serious pattern of homophobic violence in Jamaica. The violence ranges from vigilante attacks to torture and ill-treatment by police. And there appears to be little or no accountability for these human rights abuses. Exhortations to kill and maim lesbian and gay people can even be found in the lyrics of a number of popular Jamaican dancehall artists, such as Bounty Killer, Beenie Man, Buju Banton—a radical departure from Reggae’s musical tradition of preaching “one love” and social justice. Amnesty has called on the Jamaican government to institute law reform and other steps to protect the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Jamaicans from discrimination and violence. The brutal murder in June of Brian Williamson, prominent gay activist and a founding member of J-FLAG (Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals & Gays), and the recent campaign by some LGBT activists calling for the boycott of those Jamaican Reggae stars spouting hate lyrics ignited intense public debate and media interest. In this issue, we talk to the program manager of J-FLAG about the situation for the LGBT community in Jamaica, and what he thinks can be done to address discrimination and violence against LGBT people. We are withholding the name of our interviewee to honor his request to remain anonymous due to fear for his own safety. UTfront: Give us a sense of the conditions of LGBT rights in Jamaica.
    [Show full text]
  • Dossier Sur L'homophobie Dans Le Dancehall
    Dossier sur l’homophobie dans le dancehall Juin 2005, 12 des 13 concerts de Capleton sont annulés sur le territoire français. Capleton en entrevue, en juillet 2005 sur Inter-France, se dit victime de racisme. Pendant la même période, six des huit concerts de Sizzla sont annulés. Ces annulations sont le résultat d’une campagne nationale entamée par les organisations gaies et lesbiennes, qui vise à empêcher des artistes à propager des messages haineux envers les homosexuels. Cette situation qui semble nouvelle pour la France est loin de l’être. En fait, depuis le début de la campagne «Stop Murder Music» (trad. Arrêts de la Musique Meurtrière), instiguée par le groupe britannique OutRage! en juillet 2004, plus de 60 concerts d’artistes Dancehall ont été annulés en Europe et en Amérique du Nord. Leur revendication : l’arrêt complet de la diffusion de masse des chansons violentes et qui, dans certains cas, assez fréquents, appellent au meurtre de la communauté homosexuelle. La proportion des annulations a forcé l’industrie du Dancehall à s’assoir à la table des négociations avec les organisations LGBT. En février 2005, une entente entre les deux camps a été conclue : la campagne «Stop Murder Music» allait être levée et en retour, l’industrie allait arrêter de promouvoir ce type de chansons. Alors pourquoi la majorité des concerts de Capleton et Sizzla ont-ils été annulés quatre mois après la trève? La situation n’est pas simple. En fait, l’accord a été effectué entre les trois compagnies de disques majeures (VP, Greensleeves et JetStar), plusieurs promoteurs ainsi que le Black Gay Men’s Advisory Group et OutRage!, deux organisations britanniques.
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Artist
    TOTALLY TWISTED KARAOKE Songs by Artist 37 SONGS ADDED IN SEP 2021 Title Title (HED) PLANET EARTH 2 CHAINZ, DRAKE & QUAVO (DUET) BARTENDER BIGGER THAN YOU (EXPLICIT) 10 YEARS 2 CHAINZ, KENDRICK LAMAR, A$AP, ROCKY & BEAUTIFUL DRAKE THROUGH THE IRIS FUCKIN PROBLEMS (EXPLICIT) WASTELAND 2 EVISA 10,000 MANIACS OH LA LA LA BECAUSE THE NIGHT 2 LIVE CREW CANDY EVERYBODY WANTS ME SO HORNY LIKE THE WEATHER WE WANT SOME PUSSY MORE THAN THIS 2 PAC THESE ARE THE DAYS CALIFORNIA LOVE (ORIGINAL VERSION) TROUBLE ME CHANGES 10CC DEAR MAMA DREADLOCK HOLIDAY HOW DO U WANT IT I'M NOT IN LOVE I GET AROUND RUBBER BULLETS SO MANY TEARS THINGS WE DO FOR LOVE, THE UNTIL THE END OF TIME (RADIO VERSION) WALL STREET SHUFFLE 2 PAC & ELTON JOHN 112 GHETTO GOSPEL DANCE WITH ME (RADIO VERSION) 2 PAC & EMINEM PEACHES AND CREAM ONE DAY AT A TIME PEACHES AND CREAM (RADIO VERSION) 2 PAC & ERIC WILLIAMS (DUET) 112 & LUDACRIS DO FOR LOVE HOT & WET 2 PAC, DR DRE & ROGER TROUTMAN (DUET) 12 GAUGE CALIFORNIA LOVE DUNKIE BUTT CALIFORNIA LOVE (REMIX) 12 STONES 2 PISTOLS & RAY J CRASH YOU KNOW ME FAR AWAY 2 UNLIMITED WAY I FEEL NO LIMITS WE ARE ONE 20 FINGERS 1910 FRUITGUM CO SHORT 1, 2, 3 RED LIGHT 21 SAVAGE, OFFSET, METRO BOOMIN & TRAVIS SIMON SAYS SCOTT (DUET) 1975, THE GHOSTFACE KILLERS (EXPLICIT) SOUND, THE 21ST CENTURY GIRLS TOOTIMETOOTIMETOOTIME 21ST CENTURY GIRLS 1999 MAN UNITED SQUAD 220 KID X BILLEN TED REMIX LIFT IT HIGH (ALL ABOUT BELIEF) WELLERMAN (SEA SHANTY) 2 24KGOLDN & IANN DIOR (DUET) WHERE MY GIRLS AT MOOD (EXPLICIT) 2 BROTHERS ON 4TH 2AM CLUB COME TAKE MY HAND
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Artist
    Songs by Artist Title Title Title +44 3 Doors Down 5 Stairsteps, The When Your Heart Stops Live For Today Ooh Child Beating Loser 50 Cent 10 Years Road I'm On, The Candy Shop Beautiful When I'm Gone Disco Inferno Through The Iris When You're Young In Da Club Wasteland 3 Doors Down & Bob Seger Just A Lil' Bit 10,000 Maniacs Landing In London P.I.M.P. (Remix) Because The Night 3 Of Hearts Piggy Bank Candy Everybody Wants Arizona Rain Window Shopper Like The Weather Love Is Enough 50 Cent & Eminem & Adam Levine These Are Days 30 Seconds To Mars My Life 10CC Closer To The Edge My Life (Clean Version) Dreadlock Holiday Kill, The 50 Cent & Mobb Deep I'm Not In Love 311 Outta Control 112 Amber 50 Cent & Nate Dogg Peaches & Cream Beyond The Gray Sky 21 Questions U Already Know Creatures (For A While) 50 Cent & Ne-Yo 1910 Fruitgum Co. Don't Tread On Me Baby By Me Simon Says Hey You 50 Cent & Olivia 1975, The I'll Be Here Awhile Best Friend Chocolate Lovesong 50 Cent & Snoop Dogg & Young 2 Pac You Wouldn't Believe Jeezy California Love 38 Special Major Distribution (Clean Changes Hold On Loosely Version) Dear Mama Second Chance 5th Dimension, The How Do You Want It 3LW Aquarius (Let The Sun Shine In) 2 Pistols & Ray J No More Aquariuslet The Sunshine You Know Me 3OH!3 In 2 Pistols & T Pain & Tay Dizm Don't Trust Me Last Night I Didn't Get To She Got It StarStrukk Sleep At All 21 Demands 3OH!3 & Ke$ha One Less Bell To Answer Give Me A Minute My First Kiss Stoned Soul Picnic 3 Doors Down 3OH!3 & Neon Hitch Up Up & Away Away From The Sun Follow Me Down Wedding Bell Blues Be Like That 3T 6 Tre G Behind Those Eyes Anything Fresh Citizen Soldier 4 Non Blondes 702 Duck & Run What's Up I Still Love You Here By Me 4 P.M.
    [Show full text]
  • Wexner Center for the Arts
    wexner center for the arts Does Bom Bom succeed in her quest for queendom? THE BOX Emerging from her dancehall fantasy, Bom Bom finds herself back in reality and ready to compete in the July 1–31, 2017 paved lot that serves as a dance floor. Facing off with the competition, she engages in a wild display of flexibility Jeremy Deller and Cecilia Bengolea and athleticism, driven by the pumping beats. Twerking, Bom Bom’s Dream (2016) gyrating, kicking, and head-topping, Bom Bom and the other female dancers seem on the verge of possession— their bodies driven as much by instinct as by any kind of choreography. Bom Bom rises from the ground caked in dirt, but still glorious. She receives her prize—an electric standing fan—with the same pride and enthusiasm she showed in competition. It’s a scene that’s as surreal as all the previous green screen fantasy sequences combined. But it also serves to highlight the rampant cultural appropriation of the music industry—where the likes of Drake, Rihanna, and Justin Bieber reap profits from groundbreaking beats and dance moves developed in the dusty parking lots of Jamaica. —Jennifer Lange Image courtesy of the artists and The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow Curator, Film/Video Studio Program Bom Bom’s Dream Part documentary and part fantastical fiction, Bom Bom’s Dream follows the adventure of its titular character, a real Japanese dancer who dreams of being crowned queen of all Jamaican dancehall performers. For most of time, Bom Cecilia Bengolea (b. 1979) was born in Buenos Aires and lives and works in Paris.
    [Show full text]
  • Homophobie Und Aufrufe Zum Mord an Homosexuellen in Der Populären Jamaikanischen Musik
    Wissenschaftliche Dienste Deutscher Bundestag Dokumentation Homophobie und Aufrufe zum Mord an Homosexuellen in der populären jamaikanischen Musik © 2009 Deutscher Bundestag WD 1 – 459/09 Wissenschaftliche Dienste Dokumentation Seite 2 WD 1 – 459/09 Homophobie und Aufrufe zum Mord an Homosexuellen in der populären jamaika- nischen Musik Homophobie und Aufrufe zum Mord an Homosexuellen in der populären jamaikanischen Musik Verfasser/in: Ausarbeitung: WD 1 – 459/09 Abschluss der Arbeit: 9. Dezember 2009 Fachbereich: WD 1: Geschichte – Zeitgeschichte – Politik Telefon: Ausarbeitungen und andere Informationsangebote der Wissenschaftlichen Dienste geben nicht die Auffassung des Deutschen Bundestages, eines seiner Organe oder der Bundestagsverwaltung wieder. Vielmehr liegen sie in der fachlichen Verantwortung der Verfasserinnen und Verfasser sowie der Fachbereichsleitung. Der Deutsche Bundestag behält sich die Rechte der Veröffentlichung und Verbreitung vor. Beides bedarf der Zustimmung der Leitung der Abteilung W, Platz der Republik 1, 11011 Berlin. Wissenschaftliche Dienste Dokumentation Seite 3 WD 1 – 459/09 Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Jamaika im Überblick 4 2. Homosexualität in Jamaika 4 3. Populäre jamaikanische Musik: Reggae und Dancehall 4 4. Homophobe Äußerungen in der populären jamaikanischen Musik 5 5. Hinweise zur Dokumentation 5 6. Textbelege 6 7. Literatur- und Quellenverzeichnis 14 7.1. Allgemein 14 7.2. Songtexte 15 8. Anlagenverzeichnis 15 Wissenschaftliche Dienste Dokumentation Seite 4 WD 1 – 459/09 1. Jamaika im Überblick Die ehemalige britische Kolonie Jamaika hat etwa 2,8 Mio. Einwohner (2009), davon sind etwa 1 Mio. jünger als 20 Jahre (2007). Die jamaikanische Amtssprache ist Eng- lisch. Die Bevölkerung spricht jedoch mehrheitlich das jamaikanische Patois, das aus Mischung der Sprache der englischen Kolonisatoren mit derjenigen der afrika- nischen Sklaven (bzw.
    [Show full text]
  • The Riddim Method: Aesthetics, Practice, and Ownership in Jamaican Dancehall
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research John Jay College of Criminal Justice 2006 The Riddim Method: Aesthetics, Practice, and Ownership in Jamaican Dancehall Peter L. Manuel CUNY Graduate Center Wayne Marshall How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/jj_pubs/311 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] . .,_' ' '· . :~ l',•1111/w M lls1'· (20116) Vnlt11nL' 25/1 . Cnpy riglll V 2llll6 l'.11nbridgL " Uni \' L"rsil)' l'rc s, . pp . H 7- .J7ll d<>i: Ill. Ill 17/ S02h I l.Jl01l600ll~97 l'rilllL'd in lilL' U11i1L-dKingdnm The riddim method: aesthetics, practice, and ownership in Jamaican dancehall 1 PETER MANUELt and WAYNE MARSHALL+ tJ 27 Park Ave, Le,mia, NJ 07605, USA tBB Holwort/1y Strecl, Col}/l,ridge,MA 02/313,LISI\ Abstract T/11:J1111111irn11 syste111 of recvrdi11g 1111dper/ilrn11111u', }1-0,11 t/Je ·1950s to t/1e prcsc11t, co11stit11tes11 distinctive 11pproach to nutio11s of cp111positio11, origi1111/ity 1111dmu11£·rshiJ', £111ergi11g fro111 a tmditio11 of live pe1fomin11ccpnict ice 111edi11tcd/1y ( n11di11Ji>n11i11g) sm111d recordings , the relative 1111to110111yof riddi111s 1111d voici11ss i11tht! /1111111irn11,ystc111 c/111/le11gcs co11 ve11tio1111l.ide11s11bo11/ the i11tcgrily of 11 so11g 1111dt/1c dcsn·i' to ,11l1ic/1 i11t,·m11tiP1111Icopyri:,:111 1ml' applies lo /owl rn11<'C/'lio11,, 11,c11shri11ed i11 d1't'11dcs ,>f111 ·octicc. o( 11111,icol11111/cri11ls 11s /ilil1/it' do11111i11.'vVit/J t/1 e sprcnd o( Ilic 'riddi111 111c//ipd'IP //1c site, ,>f/1111111irn11 11111, , 111i,1;mtio11.rb cuid1•11ccd /1y si111ilar opproncltcs i11l1ip lwp , rcsgat'/011, rlru111'11'/J11s,11111/ />lin11gm , n·x:.:11c's01,stlll'tic systc111/111s(o1111d udlu:n·11ts 11111011g11rli,1,; 1111d 1111dic·11r, ,, ou/.,idc ,v]1111rn irn.
    [Show full text]