scholarly journals Free bodies, segmented selves: Paradoxical spaces of dancehall culture in Singapore

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Orlando Woods
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 233-254
Author(s):  
Axel Bohmann

This chapter discusses metalinguistic discourse produced by asylum seekers from English-speaking West Africa in Germany, with a focus on the role of English in participants’ communicative environment and the values and affordances ascribed to different varieties of English. The chapter argues that, in this specific context, a) English loses much of its communicative range but retains important identity-related functions, and b) the values associated with different varieties of English reflect global relationships in the World system of Englishes. African varieties are linked to in-group functions and receive differential evaluation, with Nigerian English being constructed as more standard-distant than Ghanaian English, whereas the English of German interlocutors is associated with the prestige varieties American and British English. Particularly surprising is the frequent equation of Gambian English with Jamaican ways of speech, a pattern accounted for not in terms of linguistic similarity but of the global circulation of reggae and dancehall culture. The chapter thus contributes to the sociolinguistics of globalization and the study of language, mobility, and migration.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 272-278
Author(s):  
Celena Monteiro

Dancehall, a popular dance style originating from downtown Kingston, Jamaica, now circulates across transnational spaces through digital media and postcolonial consumption systems. This presentation will study dancehall in the twenty-first century as an information age space for transcultural production, with a focus on female participation. It will interrogate the authoritative role of the video camera in the scene, and the impact that the use of screens has on the practitioners' cultural, phenomenological, and economic experience. The discussion will analyze the engagement of diversely situated females in relation to questions of mobility, visibility, and power.


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