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Title
From Nation-Building to Popular Culture: The Modernization of Performance in Tanzania |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10202/356 |
Date
1995 |
Author(s)
Lange, Siri |
Abstract
This study focuses on Tanzania's efforts to use elements from ethnic expressive arts in political propaganda and in the creation of a national culture after Independence. It analyses why nationalized traditional dances failed to work as national symbols, and further shows how certain central aspects of traditional ritual performance - aspects lost with the "nationalization and modernization of the dances - are now being carried on in a genuinely new cultural form: commercial popular theatre to entertain the low-income masses in Dar es Salaam. Siri Lange (born 1966) completed her Cand. polit. degree in social anthropology in 1994. She is presently affiliated to Chr. Michelsen Institute as a Ph.D. student sponsored by the Research Council of Norway. The project is an extension of her earlier work on Tanzania, and bears the working title "Politics from below: Popular culture, political consciousness and nation in Tanzania". |
Subject(s)
Dance; Performing arts; Traditional culture; Theatre; Tanzania |
Language
en |
Publisher
Chr. Michelsen Institute |
Relation
CMI Report; R 1995: 1 |
Type of publication
CMI Report |
Identifier
0805-505X |
Repository
Bergen - Christian Michelsen Institute
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Added to C-A: 2008-12-22;03:28:30 |
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