Product information
€116.00
Stock: In Stock Online
Our USPs
- Free DeliveryExtended Range: Delivery 3-4 working days
- Dubray RewardsEarn 464 Reward Points on this title
D'Albuquerque's Children
Product information
Author:
Type: Hardback
ISBN: 9780226734989
Date: 4th January, 2001
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
Categories
- Regional Music Styles
- Social And Cultural
Description
When the Portuguese seafarer Afonso de Albuquerque conquered the bustling port of Malacca in 1511, he effectively gained control of the entire South China Sea spice trade. Although their dominance lasted only 130 years, the Portuguese legacy lies at the heart of a burgeoning tourist attraction on the outskirts of the city, in which performers who believe they are the descendants of swashbuckling Portuguese conquerors encapsulate their "history" in a cultural stage show. Using historical and ethnographic data, Margaret Sarkissian reveals that this music and dance draws on an eclectic array of influences that span the Portuguese diaspora (one song conjures up images of Lucille Ball impersonating Carmen Miranda on "I Love Lucy"). Ironically, she shows, what began as a literate tradition in the 1950s has now become an oral one so deeply rooted in Settlement life that the younger generation, like the tourists, now see it as an unbroken heritage stretching back almost 500 years. A fascinating case of "orientalism in reverse," D'Albuquerque's Children illuminates the creative ways in which one community has adapted to life in a postcolonial world.