TY - JOUR
T1 - The "Black Pacific" and decolonisation in Melanesia : performing négritude and indigènitude
AU - Webb-Gannon, Camellia
AU - Webb, Michael
AU - Solis, Gabriel
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mela = black; nesia = islands).1 Emerging scholarship on the Black Pacific (Shilliam 2015; Solis 2015a, 2015b; Swan [as interviewed by Blain 2016]), a parallel to Paul Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic (1993), focuses on historical and contemporary identifications and articulations (“affinities, affiliations and collaborations” [Solis 2015b: 358]) between Oceanian and African diasporic peoples, cultures and politics based upon shared Otherness to colonial occupiers.2 The essay that follows contributes to this work by presenting a perspective from Melanesia. It attempts to demonstrate that over time, encounters with Atlantic-based notions of Black Power and négritude, that is, the identity politics associated with Black consciousness, as well as global discourses of Indigenousness, contributed to the production of popular forms of counter-colonial expression, one of the most significant— although underexplored—of which is music. Encounters with such ideas and expressions occurred person-to-person, sometimes through an intermediary, and also through various kinds of text, often in the form of recorded music, for example. The impact of each type and specific instance is of course unique, and context dependent.
AB - In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mela = black; nesia = islands).1 Emerging scholarship on the Black Pacific (Shilliam 2015; Solis 2015a, 2015b; Swan [as interviewed by Blain 2016]), a parallel to Paul Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic (1993), focuses on historical and contemporary identifications and articulations (“affinities, affiliations and collaborations” [Solis 2015b: 358]) between Oceanian and African diasporic peoples, cultures and politics based upon shared Otherness to colonial occupiers.2 The essay that follows contributes to this work by presenting a perspective from Melanesia. It attempts to demonstrate that over time, encounters with Atlantic-based notions of Black Power and négritude, that is, the identity politics associated with Black consciousness, as well as global discourses of Indigenousness, contributed to the production of popular forms of counter-colonial expression, one of the most significant— although underexplored—of which is music. Encounters with such ideas and expressions occurred person-to-person, sometimes through an intermediary, and also through various kinds of text, often in the form of recorded music, for example. The impact of each type and specific instance is of course unique, and context dependent.
KW - Melanesians
KW - blacks
KW - decolonization
KW - music
KW - race identity
KW - social aspects
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:49671
UR - https://search.informit.com.au/fullText;dn=797074002053081;res=IELIND
U2 - 10.15286/jps.127.2.177-206
DO - 10.15286/jps.127.2.177-206
M3 - Article
SN - 0032-4000
VL - 127
SP - 177
EP - 206
JO - Journal of the Polynesian Society
JF - Journal of the Polynesian Society
IS - 2
ER -