This article focuses on the ability of a historically important musical instrument in the East African country of Rwanda, the inanga, to contribute to the (re-)translation of issues related to unity and reconciliation efforts after the genocide of 1994. By concentrating on the transmission of tradition from Kirusu Thomas to Sophie Nzayisenga, from father to daughter, I underscore the significant changes in cultural contexts for historical and contemporary inanga performance while also positioning the instrument within the dominant cultural metaphors of ‘blockage’ and ‘flow’. Throughout the article, I draw on inanga song texts to demonstrate the role of the inanga as cultural translator
This thesis focuses on popular music in the “New Rwanda” (Rwanda Rushya). It starts from life on the...
Tutsi artists-in-exile sought to use performance as a mode of cultural survival, both to preserve Tu...
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...
After the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, the post-genocide government spearheaded the cr...
During the last 50 years, music has played a critical role in Rwandan ethnic unity, division, and in...
© 2017 International African Institute. This article considers the reconstruction of Rwanda's post-g...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
Author: Peter Okeno Ong’are Primary Supervisor: Dr Simon Mills Secondary Supervisor: Prof Max...
During the 1994 Rwandan genocide an estimated 800 000 people, or roughly 12 per cent of Rwanda's pop...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
East and Southern African music has been strikingly similar since time immemorial. The music industr...
This article considers choral music as a repository of history within the Kenyan social and politica...
Since reaching power by putting an end to the genocide, the Rwandan Patriotic Front has undertaken t...
This thesis aims to identify how theatre is used in post-genocide Rwanda, specifically between 2004 ...
This thesis focuses on popular music in the “New Rwanda” (Rwanda Rushya). It starts from life on the...
Tutsi artists-in-exile sought to use performance as a mode of cultural survival, both to preserve Tu...
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...
After the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, the post-genocide government spearheaded the cr...
During the last 50 years, music has played a critical role in Rwandan ethnic unity, division, and in...
© 2017 International African Institute. This article considers the reconstruction of Rwanda's post-g...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
Author: Peter Okeno Ong’are Primary Supervisor: Dr Simon Mills Secondary Supervisor: Prof Max...
During the 1994 Rwandan genocide an estimated 800 000 people, or roughly 12 per cent of Rwanda's pop...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
East and Southern African music has been strikingly similar since time immemorial. The music industr...
This article considers choral music as a repository of history within the Kenyan social and politica...
Since reaching power by putting an end to the genocide, the Rwandan Patriotic Front has undertaken t...
This thesis aims to identify how theatre is used in post-genocide Rwanda, specifically between 2004 ...
This thesis focuses on popular music in the “New Rwanda” (Rwanda Rushya). It starts from life on the...
Tutsi artists-in-exile sought to use performance as a mode of cultural survival, both to preserve Tu...
A dance begins beneath the outstretched branches of the giant umunyinya tree in Rwanda. First there ...