'Music of origin': Class, social category and the performers and audience of kiba, a South African migrant genre |
Journal/Book: Africa. 1997; 67: Trade Dept, 22 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LF, Midlothian, Scotland. Edinburgh Univ Press. 454-475.
Abstract: This article uses a case study of the kiba migrant performance genre from the Northern Province of South Africa to illuminate recent theoretical ideas on the role of performers and audiences, and in so doing to offer a critical perspective on the way in which the concept of class has been conceptualised in some southern African studies. While the homogenising and Western-derived concept of class may well be unsuitable in some African and other southern contexts, as certain writers have claimed, migrant northern Sotho communities have developed indigenous notions of social category which combine modern work-related sources of identity with apparently backward-looking celebrations of traditional behaviour. The article examines the contention of performance theory that cultural expression does not merely reflect the predilections of established groupings of people but may provide a focus for the consolidation and identity of new ones.
Note: Article James D, Univ London London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, London WC2A 2AE, ENGLAND
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