In this article, I address the distinctive spatial practices of Minstrel Carnival participants, exploring the ways in which paraders use their bodies to collectively lay claim to Cape Town and access urban space through sonic and embodied performances. Recent scholarship has called attention to the central narratives of slavery and emancipation contained within the Minstrel Carnival, as well as the symbolic significance of the Carnival’s re-appropriation of city space in relation to the coloured community’s colonial and apartheid experiences of dispossession, forced removals, and social dislocation
This article offers an account of two case studies of theatrical performance from London and Cape To...
The mixed-race community of Cape Town is known locally as the “coloured” people of South Africa: nei...
This article uses a case study of the kiba migrant performance genre from the Northern Province of S...
After South Africa entered into democracy in 1994, a mediation period of change was set in motion. I...
Includes bibliographica references (leaves 98-104).The power of carnival has long been appreciated a...
Little has been written about the Coon Carnival since its inception in the late nineteenth century. ...
This article investigates the role played by cultural initiatives in urban struggles in South Africa...
This article looks at two social couple dance forms, ‘jazz’ and salsa, the first emerging in the 197...
Both geography and choreography are concerned with the movement of the body in space, and in the con...
This article is an extended version of two papers exploring White Spectatorship in Victorian Britain...
In this dissertation I investigate the Christmas Bands Movement of the Western Cape of South Africa....
This essay spotlights performances, social and artistic, in 2020 that touch points on the circum-Atl...
When writing an ethnography on how young Afrikaners re-imagine their cultural and religious identiti...
This article examines attitudes to the Boer War − and nationhood and empire more broadly − through t...
In this essay I argue that Haitian-American artists Edwidge Danticat and Wyclef Jean employ Carnival...
This article offers an account of two case studies of theatrical performance from London and Cape To...
The mixed-race community of Cape Town is known locally as the “coloured” people of South Africa: nei...
This article uses a case study of the kiba migrant performance genre from the Northern Province of S...
After South Africa entered into democracy in 1994, a mediation period of change was set in motion. I...
Includes bibliographica references (leaves 98-104).The power of carnival has long been appreciated a...
Little has been written about the Coon Carnival since its inception in the late nineteenth century. ...
This article investigates the role played by cultural initiatives in urban struggles in South Africa...
This article looks at two social couple dance forms, ‘jazz’ and salsa, the first emerging in the 197...
Both geography and choreography are concerned with the movement of the body in space, and in the con...
This article is an extended version of two papers exploring White Spectatorship in Victorian Britain...
In this dissertation I investigate the Christmas Bands Movement of the Western Cape of South Africa....
This essay spotlights performances, social and artistic, in 2020 that touch points on the circum-Atl...
When writing an ethnography on how young Afrikaners re-imagine their cultural and religious identiti...
This article examines attitudes to the Boer War − and nationhood and empire more broadly − through t...
In this essay I argue that Haitian-American artists Edwidge Danticat and Wyclef Jean employ Carnival...
This article offers an account of two case studies of theatrical performance from London and Cape To...
The mixed-race community of Cape Town is known locally as the “coloured” people of South Africa: nei...
This article uses a case study of the kiba migrant performance genre from the Northern Province of S...