Title of article :
LIP-SYNCH GOSPEL: CHRISTIAN MUSIC AND THE ETHNOPOETICS OF IDENTITY IN KENYA
Author/Authors :
Lamont، Mark نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
In recent years there has been an outpouring of Kenyan scholarship on
the ways popular musicians engage with politics in the public sphere. With
respect to the rise in the 1990s and 2000s of gospel music – whose politics
are more pietistic than activist – this article challenges how to ‘understand’
the politics of gospel music taken from a small speech community, in this
case the Meru. In observing street performances of a new style of preaching,
‘lip-synch’ gospel, I offer ethnographic readings of song lyrics to show that
Meru’s gospel singers can address moral debates not readily aired in mainline
and Pentecostal-Charismatic churches. Critical of hypocrisy in the church and
engaging with a wider politics of belonging and identity, Meru gospel singers
weave localized ethnopoetics into their Christian music, with the effect that
their politics effectively remain concealed within Meru and invisible to the
national public sphere. While contesting the perceived corruption, sin and
hypocrisy in everyday sociality, such Meru gospel singer groups cannot rightly
be considered a local ‘counter-public’ because they still work their politics in
the shadows of the churches.
Keywords :
THE ETHNOPOETICS , CHRISTIAN MUSIC , Kenya , Africa , Kenya , IDENTITY IN KENYA , Mark Lamont