MUSIC DECOLONIALIZES LUSOFONIA? Cover Image

MUSIC DECOLONIALIZES LUSOFONIA?
MUSIC DECOLONIALIZES LUSOFONIA?

ENTREPRENEURIAL EFFORTS TOWARDS INTERCULTURALISM

Author(s): Bart Paul Vanspauwen
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Fine Arts / Performing Arts
Published by: Editura Academiei Forțelor Aeriene „Henri Coandă”
Keywords: music; lusofonia; expressive culture; propaganda; heritage

Summary/Abstract: Recent research in the fields of Ethnomusicology, Anthropology and Sociology frame the concept of lusofonia more as a return movement of the expressive cultures and memories of Portugal’s former colonial territories than as a linguistic field of the spoken sphere. In addition, in Portugal, institutional racism has legitimated both sociological and cultural racism perspectives. This friction has implied, among musicians, addressing lusofonia as a space of struggle, decolonialism and intervention. If the documentary Lusofonia, a (r)evolução continues to be influential, so is the claim that the lack remains, of a sustained institutional interest in lusofonia and its musical fusions. Drawing upon the results of 6 years of field research in Lisbon, I want to shed more light on how efforts of cultural entrepreneurs have addressed issues of politics of memory to negotiate national narratives and cultural policies. By mapping social struggles over the definition of collective memory, Ethnomusicology may reveal how political categories blur and dichtomize posctcolonial cultural expression. Initiatives such as Lisboa que Amanhece, Conexão Lusófona, Lisboa Mistura and Musidanças, mentioned in this paper, project intercultural understandings of lusofonia processes as fundamental for Portugal’s contemporary, national identity.

  • Issue Year: 5/2016
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 209-213
  • Page Count: 5
  • Language: English