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- Title
EMERGENCE AND THE INSULA IMPROVISA: St. Brendan's Island and Afro/Canarian (Jazz) Fusion Music.
- Authors
LOMANNO, MARK
- Abstract
This article addresses the historical creation of the Canary Islands as spaces of isolation and spaces that isolate, and suggests how these spaces are re-appropriated and re/worked as critiques of that isolation. Beginning with the mythical St. Brendan's Island, I will outline some episodes through which we can critique the actively produced elisions that confine the Canary Islands and their inhabitants to the periphery, perhaps glimpsing opportunities for emergence from within these boundaries. By outlining some historical gaps in Afro/Canarian historiography and geographic gaps in Afro/Canarian cartography, I will demonstrate how the politics of the cite can gloss over the actualities of the site. Amid these gaps and fissures lie spaces in which inhabitants of the Canary Islands can re/form local and global ideas about the Islands and local cultures. Based on ongoing ethnographic research begun in 2009, this article explores how Afro/Canarian jazz musicians draw on local histories and historiographies of fusion to resist and rewrite their peripheral status, reasserting and re/placing themselves on the map through critical re-appropriation of cartographic, historiographical, and sonic technologies.
- Subjects
CANARY Islands; JAZZ-rock music; CARTOGRAPHY; GEOGRAPHICAL myths; ENGLISH elision; LOCAL culture
- Publication
Shima, 2013, Vol 7, Issue 2, p92
- ISSN
1834-6049
- Publication type
Article