© 2017 International African Institute. This article considers the reconstruction of Rwanda's post-genocide music industry through the national music competition, Primus Guma Guma Super Star. It explores local ideas about 'playback' and 'live' music, and argues that these two performative categories can be understood as wider metaphors for the relationship between the Rwandan state and its citizens, particularly Rwandan youth. On the one hand, Guma Guma aims to create the ideal post-genocide celebrity subject who will 'play back' a unified, de-ethnicized Rwandan identity with body and words. On the other, during the first two seasons of the competition, audiences demanded 'live' performance and Guma Guma prompted heated debate about 'taboo'...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
A dance begins beneath the outstretched branches of the giant umunyinya tree in Rwanda. First there ...
This article focuses on the ability of a historically important musical instrument in the East Afric...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
This article considers the relationship between performance and the transnational public sphere, und...
During the last 50 years, music has played a critical role in Rwandan ethnic unity, division, and in...
During the 1994 Rwandan genocide an estimated 800 000 people, or roughly 12 per cent of Rwanda's pop...
After the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, the post-genocide government spearheaded the cr...
There is little doubt of the fundamental impact of the 1994 Rwanda genocide on the country's social ...
This thesis explores religion and popular culture in post-genocide Rwanda. In particular, I examine ...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
This article explores how the Rwandan state ‘stages’ its diaspora as agents of change. I argue that‘...
International aid has influenced and, in part, shaped the artistic sector in Africa's Great Lakes re...
This thesis focuses on popular music in the “New Rwanda” (Rwanda Rushya). It starts from life on the...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
A dance begins beneath the outstretched branches of the giant umunyinya tree in Rwanda. First there ...
This article focuses on the ability of a historically important musical instrument in the East Afric...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
This article considers the relationship between performance and the transnational public sphere, und...
During the last 50 years, music has played a critical role in Rwandan ethnic unity, division, and in...
During the 1994 Rwandan genocide an estimated 800 000 people, or roughly 12 per cent of Rwanda's pop...
After the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, the post-genocide government spearheaded the cr...
There is little doubt of the fundamental impact of the 1994 Rwanda genocide on the country's social ...
This thesis explores religion and popular culture in post-genocide Rwanda. In particular, I examine ...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
This article explores how the Rwandan state ‘stages’ its diaspora as agents of change. I argue that‘...
International aid has influenced and, in part, shaped the artistic sector in Africa's Great Lakes re...
This thesis focuses on popular music in the “New Rwanda” (Rwanda Rushya). It starts from life on the...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
A dance begins beneath the outstretched branches of the giant umunyinya tree in Rwanda. First there ...