Perifèria: Revista de Recerca i Formació en Antropologia (Dec 2015)

From “tribes” to “regions”. Ethnicity and musical identity in western Uganda

  • Linda Cimardi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/periferia.478
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
pp. 44 – 59

Abstract

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This article looks at how the paradigm of ethnicity in Uganda has influenced the conception and perception of cultural identity, and specifically of music identity. According to the 2002 Census, Uganda counts more than 50 different peoples within its territory. For most of these, the language spoken locally and the complex of musics and dances characterize their identity. These elements are currently fostered by the Government also by promoting annually a national festival where each area presents, among other items, its own music and dance repertoires. The structure of the present school festival intends to follow historical and cultural sedimentations (identifying “regions”), but it can still be traced to the colonial classification of peoples (“tribes”). Considering data especially from western Uganda, the intermingling of the paradigm of ethnicity with the ones of music representativeness and identity will be observed. Discussion will consider the repertoires chosen for representativeness in the national context and concentrate on the ambiguity of the ethnic uniqueness of these musics and on the possibilities of expression of minorities.

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