Description
About the Author
J r me Camal is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Reviews
"Merging political, musical, and social analysis Camal offers a thick sonic description of the lived experience of colonialism in the French Caribbean. Creolized Aurality moves beyond a simple study of the political and musical forms of the French Caribbean and towards a true theorization of not just Antillean sound, but the sound of a postcolonial predicament. Camal asks: what does postcolonialism sound like? How is creole nationalism sonically enacted? And how can an analysis of soundscapes reveal a social and political world? The result is a powerful contribution to both Caribbean Studies and the Anthropology of sound more broadly."--Yarimar Bonilla, Rutgers University "Partly a rethinking of creolization, partly an exploration of sound studies and aurality, and partly a careful excavation of anti- and postcolonial politics, this book weaves its narrative through a sustained engagement with the sounds, discourses, and meanings of gwoka in Guadeloupe. Creolized Aurality is an innovative, timely, and intellectually substantive contribution to Caribbean studies, anthropology, and ethnomusicology."--Timothy Rommen, University of Pennsylvania
Book Information
ISBN 9780226631776
Author Jerome Camal
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint University of Chicago Press
Publisher The University of Chicago Press