1 research outputs found
JAMAICA BRASILEIRA: THE POLITICS OF REGGAE IN SĂO LUĂS, BRAZIL, 1968-2010
Residents of SĂŁo LuĂs like to say that reggae music reached their island city in MaranhĂŁo state in northeast Brazil âthrough the back door,â into makeshift venues deep in urban slums. In time, audiences in SĂŁo LuĂs cultivated a cosmopolitan music scene and an innovative cultural industry that earned their city the title of Jamaica Brasileira, or the Brazilian Jamaica. Based on interviews, archival research, participant-observation, and material sources including musical records, this dissertation explores how and why reggae developed local roots in SĂŁo LuĂs and its subsequent role in local socio-economic and political developments.
This study finds that Jamaican rhythms of the late 1960s and 1970s arrived primarily through the global music industry via the economic metropoles of the north Atlantic and southeast Brazil alongside other popular international styles. However, as audiences experimented by dancing in couples, they drew upon a range of Caribbean styles including merengue, cumbia, and boleros that had arrived through maritime trade in the mid-20th century. Meanwhile, electrical engineers and entrepreneurs in SĂŁo LuĂs independently developed audio arrays known as sound systems resembling similar institutions in Jamaica; these sound systems in turn spurred the growth of the Jamaican-based music scene in conjunction with audiences. Beginning in 1990, people from SĂŁo LuĂs made direct contact with Jamaica, initiating a new movement of people, material goods, and culture.
The working-class music scene of SĂŁo LuĂs also played a crucial role in negotiations between popular sectors, elites, and police during the military dictatorship, and reggae was even briefly criminalized in the public eye by association with violence, poverty, and marijuana. However, activists in the local black movement defended reggae and began to see the music as a primary weapon in their struggle for black liberation, leading to vigorous debates about nation, region, and culture. As the reggae scene moved from the informal to the formal sector, its sheer economic clout transformed the socio-cultural landscape of SĂŁo LuĂs. Sound system owners also mobilized their audience bases into voting blocs, resulting in the election of one âreggae politicianâ to federal congress through a new complex of political-cultural patronage