Sounding Off
Rhythm, Music, and Identity in West African and Caribbean Francophone Novels
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https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt14bt5s0Author(s)
Huntington, Julie
Language
EnglishAbstract
Intrigued by "texted" sonorities-the rhythms, musics, ordinary noises, and sounds of language in narratives-Julie Huntington examines the soundscapes in contemporary Francophone novels such as Ousmane Sembene's God's Bits of Wood (Senegal), and Patrick Chamoiseau's Solibo Magnificent (Martinique). Through an ethnomusicological perspective, Huntington argues in Sounding Off that the range of sounds -footsteps, heartbeats, drumbeats-represented in West African and Caribbean works provides a rhythmic polyphony that creates spaces for configuring social and cultural identities. Huntington's analysis shows how these writers and others challenge the aesthetic and political conventions that privilege written texts over orality and invite readers-listeners to participate in critical dialogues-to sound off, as it were, in local and global communities.
Keywords
Language & Literature; African Studies; MusicISBN
9781439900338, 9781439900314Publisher
Temple University PressPublisher website
http://tupress.temple.edu/Publication date and place
2009Series
African Soundscapes,Classification
Literature: history and criticism
Theory of music and musicology