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Divine utterances (The performance of afro-cuban 'santería') Includes audio CD

Autor Katherine J. Hagedorn

Editorial SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS

Divine utterances (The performance of afro-cuban 'santería') Includes audio CD
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36,03€
Speichern 1,90€
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In Divine Utteranges, Katherine J. Hagedorn explores the enduring cultural and spiritual power of the music of Afro-Cuban Santeria and the process by which it has been transformed for a secular audience. She focuses on the integral connections betwee...

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  • Verlag SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS
  • ISBN13 9781560989479
  • ISBN10 1560989475
  • Gegenstandsart BUCH
  • Buchseiten 296
  • Jahr der Ausgabe 2001
  • Bindung Gebunden

Divine utterances (The performance of afro-cuban 'santería') Includes audio CD

Autor Katherine J. Hagedorn

Editorial SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS

In Divine Utteranges, Katherine J. Hagedorn explores the enduring cultural and spiritual power of the music of Afro-Cuban Santeria and the process by which it has been transformed for a secular audience. She focuses on the integral connections betwee...

-5% Rabatt.    37,93€
36,03€
Speichern 1,90€
Nicht verfügbar, verfügbarkeit bestätigen
Kostenloser Versand
Festland Spanien

Buch Details

In Divine Utteranges, Katherine J. Hagedorn explores the enduring cultural and spiritual power of the music of Afro-Cuban Santeria and the process by which it has been transformed for a secular audience. She focuses on the integral connections between sacred music performances and the dramatizations of theatrical troupes, especially the state-sponsored Conjunto Folklorico Nacional de Cuba, and examines the complex relationships involving race, politics, and religion in Cuba. The music that Hagedorn describes is rooted in Afro-Cuban religious tradition and today pervades secular performances that can produce a trance in audience members in the same way as a traditional religious ceremony.

Hagedorn's analysis is deeply informed by her experiences in Cuba as a woman, scholar, and apprentice bata drummer. She argues that constructions of race and gender, the politics of pre- and post-Revolutionary Cuba, the economics of tourism, and contemporary practices within Santeria have contributed to a blurring of boundaries between the sacred and the folkloric. As both modes now vie for primacy in Cuba's burgeoning tourist trade, what had once been the music of a marginalized group is now a cultural expression of national pride.