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[ecrea] Special Reggae Studies issue of Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture 9.1 - new issue
Thu May 31 22:04:50 GMT 2018
Intellect is delighted to announce that the special issue of
/Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture/ 9.1
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=26017/>is now
available.
For more information about ISCC 9.1 including how to subscribe, please
click here
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=165/view,page=0/>
or email (tessa /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(tessa /at/ intellectbooks.com)>
This issue features an exciting range of Reggae Studies in a Global Context.
Themes include but are not limited to:
• History of Reggae
• Reggae as culture
• Reggae Music and Media
• Musical and sociological analysis of Reggae Music
• Reggae’s Influence on Global Popular Music
• Global manifestations of Reggae Music
• The Bob Marley phenomenon
• Sound-Systems and other Reggae Music collectives
• Reggae Films and videos
• Reggae Music in the context of creative industries
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
_Rockers,‘soulheads and lovers: Sound systems back in da day
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=26018/>_
Authors: Michael McMillan
Page Start: 9
This article explores the emergence of sound system culture in Britain,
from post-war Caribbean migration to the early 1980s, in terms of House
and Blues parties, clubs and dancehalls, bass culture, dance-floor
corporeality, and raver’s sartorial aesthetics and interventions, with
reference to oral history interviews with sound system pioneers,
practitioners and ravers from my installation-based exhibition, Rockers,
Soulheads & Lovers: Sound Systems Back in Da Day
_Documenting London’s bass culture and blues dances:Reggae in the films
of Horace Ové and Franco Rosso
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=26013/>___
Authors: Kate Bolgar Smith
Page Start: 29
This article provides an analysis of two black British feature films –
Horace Ové’s 1975 film, Pressure and Franco Rosso’s 1980 film, Babylon –
and integrates the films into a wider discussion of life in Britain
during the 1970s–80s. Drawing on the musical and cultural theories of
Paul Gilroy and on the poet Linton Kwesi Johnson’s concept of ‘bass
culture’, the author argues that reggae creates what Clare Corbould
calls an ‘aural community’ that is simultaneously local and transnational.
_Levels of locality and recent expressions ofreggae in Mexico
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=26017/>_
Authors: Christian Eugenio López-Negrete Miranda
Page Start: 79
This article discusses various issues surrounding the presence of
Jamaican popular music in Mexico and focuses on issues of great
importance as the arrival, development, adoption and adaptation of these
musical practices that arise in specific times or time periods; in
different levels of locality that are related to each other, at the same
time related to the global; and that they express themselves by
reinterpreting these genres in their own ways.
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