Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Decolonizing time through dance with Kwenda Lima: Cabo Verde, creolization, and affiliative afromodernity

2018; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 31; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/13696815.2018.1512849

ISSN

1469-9346

Autores

Ananya Jahanara Kabir,

Tópico(s)

Caribbean and African Literature and Culture

Resumo

This essay examines the dance practice of the Lisbon-based artiste Kwenda Lima (born 1977 at Sal, Cabo Verde), as manifested on three levels: the pedagogy of the Luso-African social dance, kizomba; a form of dance therapy, which he calls 'Kaizen dance'; and the choreography of 'Afro-contemporary' dance. Through the interplay of these levels Lima responds to the specific characteristics of Lusophone (post)colonialism as well as the general problems of modernity involving time, work, and materialism. These responses are shaped by the post-imperial urban space of Lisbon, the transnational world of social dance, as well as his personal networks linking Cabo Verde, continental West Africa, and Europe. Moreover, Lima's dance incorporates references to Cabo Verde's history of creolization and various non-Lusophone postcolonial cultural influences. An affiliative afromodernity is generated, which reconfigures the relationship between race, authenticity, and appropriation while decolonizing time through dance.

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