Examines the history of a genre that spans several continents and several centuries. Material from Mexico, Cuba, France, and Great Britain are brought together to create anew, expand upon, and critique the standard histories of danzón narrated by Mexico's danzón experts and others. In these standard histories, origins and nationality are key to the constitution of genres that are racialized and moralized for political ends. Danzón, its antecedents, and successors are treated as generic equivalents despite being quite different. From the danzón on, these genres are positioned as being the products of individual, male originators and their nations. Africa is treated as a conceptual nation, and Africanness as something extra that racializes hegemonic European music-dance forms. Political leanings and strategies determine whether these music-dance forms are interpreted, adopted, or co-opted as being black or white.
Disputes the idea that cultural/poetico-musical characteristics are integral to or combined with the biological criteria which define ethnicities and races. Samba was born at the turn of the 20th century in working-class, multiethnic neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro. With its syncopated rhythm characteristic of celebrations in Black Brazilian communities, it is an urban genre associated with the early days of Carnaval which was widely broadcast on the radio in the 1930s. It thus lost its local and regional character and enjoyed worldwide recognition. Controlled by the Estado Novo, samba became 'civilized' and assumed an important symbolic role in building a Brazilian identity, both real and ideal. The result of a long and complex process of hybridization, the samba transcends and expresses more than a century of racial and social affiliations and tensions ubiquitous in Brazilian society, ultimately becoming an ideological matrix and a model of cultural fusion. The role and exceptional creativity of certain artists (Sinhô, N. Rosa, Zé Keti, C. Buarque...) and the social and aesthetic processes which contributed to the recomposition of the elements of samba are examined from a sociosemiotic standpoint which draws as well on a major audiovisual source and relevant works published in Brazil., unedited non–English abstract received by RILM] Cette contribution remet en question l’idée selon laquelle aux critères biologiques définissant les ethnies et les races se trouveraient intégrées ou agrégées des caractéristiques culturelles – poético-musicales en l’occurrence. Le samba naît au tournant du xxe siècle dans les quartiers populaires de Rio de Janeiro, marqués par leur composition pluriethnique. Rythme syncopé privilégié des célébrations pratiquées dans les communautés noires brésiliennes, ce genre urbain est associé aux débuts du Carnaval et abondamment radiodiffusé dans les années 1930. Il perd alors son caractère communautaire et régional et connaît bientôt une consécration mondiale. Contrôlé par l’Estado Novo, le samba se « civilise » et joue un rôle symbolique de premier plan dans la construction, réelle et idéelle, de l’identité brésilienne. Résultat d’un long et complexe processus d’hybridation, le samba transcende et articule sur plus d’un siècle les appartenances et les tensions raciales et sociales, omniprésentes dans la société brésilienne, au point de s’ériger en matrice idéologique et modèle de fusion culturelle. L’approche sociosémiotique de ce travail, qui repose sur l’écoute et visionnage d’un important fonds audiovisuel et sur l’étude des ouvrages publiés au Brésil, met en lumière le rôle et la créativité singulière de certains artistes (Sinhô, N. Rosa, Zé Keti, C. Buarque...) et les processus sociaux et esthétiques qui ont contribué à la recomposition de ses éléments.
This article analyzes the role of Haitian migration and Haitian transnational engagement in the past 20 years. Shows that dependency on Haitian migrants' economic flows into their country has historically not been met by public policy leveraging these flows and that under the current economic recovery period, opportunistic views aside, it is unrealistic to expect a strategy drastically different from that of the pre-earthquake period.
Through an examination of the recording Gargalhada (pega na chaleira), a chansonnette sung by Eduardo das Neves, the origin of the expression 'pegar na chaleira' (bootlicking) is traced, while some inconsistencies in the online catalogue of the Instituto Moreira Salles are revealed. Probably recorded in 1906, six years before the establishment of the Odeon plant in Rio, the piece was labeled a lundu, a paradigmatically Afro-Brazilian genre, in the 1915–26 catalogues. The music and laughter that Neves appropriates for himself were created by George Washington Johnson, the first black star of early sound recording, and reused in other Casa Edison (Brazilian Odeon) recordings on sale from 1913 to 1919. But while the former North American slave ridicules himself in accordance with white stereotypes, the self-designated Creole stages a satire on the behavior of upperclass men in Rio de Janeiro. In this process, the coon song turns into its antithesis., unedited non–English abstract received by RILM] Um exame do fonograma Gargalhada (pega na chaleira), cançoneta por Eduardo das Neves, expõe a origem da expressão “pegar na chaleira” e revela incongruências nos critérios de catalogação online do Instituto Moreira Salles. Provavelmente datada de 1906, a gravação aparece como um “lundu” em catálogos comerciais de 1915–1926, e as mesmas ideias musicais foram reaproveitadas em outros registros sonoros da Casa Edison comercializados entre 1913 e 1919. A música e o gargalhar que Neves reaproveita foram criados por George Washington Johnson, o primeiro astro negro da gravação mecânica. Mas enquanto o ex-escravo norte-americano se auto-ridiculariza de acordo com estereótipos brancos, o autodenominado “crioulo” encena uma sátira ao comportamento masculino das classes dominantes do Rio. Neste processo, a coon song transforma-se na antítese do gênero.
This paper provides a cross-cultural analysis of the experiences of Oxfam GB in supporting urban community-based disaster risk reduction in Haiti, Guyana and the Dominican Republic. The paper focuses on the efforts of Oxfam GB and its local partners to overcome the determining influence of local governance on who benefits from interventions, and the longevity of positive outcomes.
Against the backdrop of a tremendous surge in ethnic identity politics and social movement organizing over the last two decades in Ecuador, two complementary musical trends are explored that have emerged in reference to the country's Afro-Ecuadorian population. The first showcases the traditional music and dance of the marimba as a symbol of Afro-Ecuadorian identity. The second features numerous popular music fusions of the marimba repertoire with genres including rock, salsa, reggaetón, and more, with broad appeal to audiences throughout the country and beyond.
Hamburg, Germany: Institut fur Iberoamerika-Kunde (IIK), GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies/Leibniz-Institut fur Globale und Regionale Studien
Location:
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
With the intensification of economic relations between the People's Republic of China and the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, Beijing's role as a development donor has expanded in the region. The transparency of the Chinese donor services are limited since the transitions between development aid, investment and trade credits and direct investments are flowing. Focal points of Chinese engagement in Latin America and the Caribbean are upgrading the infrastructure projects in the extractive and energy sectors, education and training.
Hamburg, Germany: Institut fur Iberoamerika-Kunde (IIK), GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies/Leibniz-Institut fur Globale und Regionale Studien
Location:
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The economies of Latin America and the Caribbean have quickly recovered from the global financial crisis. With growth rates exceeding 6 percent from the previous year in 2010, the economies outpaced the OECD, which grew only by 2.3 percent. The growth prospects for the region are further analyzed.