The Intertextuality of Black American Spoken Word and African Griot Tradition : From the Motherland to America
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Griots in Africa are considered among the first spoken word poets, as they used these oral traditions to preserve their societys cultural artifacts and traditions. These African oratory institutions underwent a transformative evolution during the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and in the New World, many displaced African-born people continued the griot tradition, expanding this practice to include their lived experiences and social realities; hence, modernizing spoken word poetry. The Intertextuality of Black American Spoken Word and African Griot Tradition: From the Motherland to America by Tammie Jenkins examines these relationships to show how spoken word poetry incorporates musical sampling to connect with historical events, politics, and African diasporic discourses from emancipation through the present. Using works by Meshell Ndegeocello and Ursula Rucker, Jenkins analyzes how they reimagine history, politics, and the arts to create counternarratives that challenge larger accepted social narratives. In doing so, their approach demonstrates how Black American spoken word poets communicate and build reciprocal relationships with their listening audiences across intersections of race, gender, class, and geography.
Griots in Africa were considered among the first spoken word poets and used this oral tradition to preserve their society’s cultural artifacts and traditions. This African institution underwent a transformative evolution during the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and in the New World, many displaced African-born people continued the griot tradition, expanding this practice to include their lived experiences and social realities and forming modern spoken word poetry. The Intertextuality of Black American Spoken Word and African Griot Tradition: From the Motherland to America by Tammie Jenkins examines this formation to show how spoken word poetry has used musical sampling to connect with historical events, politics, and African diaspora discourses from emancipation through the present. Using works by Meshell Ndegeocello and Ursula Rucker, Jenkins discovers how they reimagined history, politics, and the arts to create counternarratives that challenged largely accepted social narratives. In doing so, their methods enable Black American spoken word poets to communicate and build reciprocal relationships with their listening audiences today across intersections of race, gender, and class.
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