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Time and memory in reggae music

The politics of hope

By Sarah Daynes

Time and memory in reggae music
Paperback +
  • Price: £18.99
  • ISBN: 9781784992804
  • Publish Date: Feb 2016
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
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    eBook -
  • Price: £18.99
  • ISBN: 9781847796929
  • Publish Date: Jul 2013
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
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    Book Information

    • Format: eBook
    • ISBN: 978-1-8477-9692-9
    • Published Date: July 2013
    • Series: Music and Society

    Description

    On the basis of a body of reggae songs from the 1970s and late 1990s, this book offers a sociological analysis of memory, hope and redemption in reggae music. From Dennis Brown to Sizzla, the way in which reggae music constructs a musical, religious and socio-political memory in rupture with dominant models is vividly illustrated by the lyrics themselves. How is the past remembered in the present? How does remembering the past allow for imagining the future? How does collective memory participate in the historical grounding of collective identity? What is the relationship between tradition and revolution, between the recollection of the past and the imagination of the future, between passivity and action? Ultimately, this case study of 'memory at work' opens up a theoretical problem: the conceptualization of time and its relationship with memory.

    Contents

    List of tables
    List of boxes
    List of figures
    Acknowledgements
    Introduction
    Part I. A study in elective affinity: music, religion and memory
    1. Reggae and Rastafari: a history
    2. Interpreting songs: notes on methodology
    3. Analysis of reggae charts, 1968-2000
    4. The construction of a musical memory in reggae music
    Part II. Remembering the past
    5. Slavery and the diaspora: temporal and spatial articulations
    6. The construction of a religious chain of memory
    Part III. Revealing the future
    7. Messianism, between past and future
    8. Hope and redemption
    9. The end of the world as future-present
    Part IV. From revelation to revolution
    10. The construction of a sociopolitical memory of liberation
    11. Rhetoric of oppression and social critique
    12. Resistance and revolution
    Part V. Conclusion
    13. Time and memory
    Bibliography
    Index

    Author

    Sarah Daynes is Assistant Professor in Sociology at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro

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