创造神圣空间:说唱音乐对宗教意识的影响

Barbara B. Pemberton
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摘要

说唱音乐是嘻哈文化的声音和灵魂,嘻哈文化是20世纪末一种强大的社会、音乐和政治现象。这种音乐类型起源于纽约贫困地区的年轻人,有着广泛的根基:波多黎各、拉丁美洲和牙买加的声音,非洲部落的鼓声,1930年代哈莱姆文艺复兴时期的口语诗歌,蓝调音乐,灵歌,slam诗歌,以及民权运动的演讲。伴随着这种音乐流派发展起来的是5% Nation,一个相对不为人知的伊斯兰民族的分支,从一开始就接受了嘻哈文化。God Hop,有些人称之为与百分之五有关的说唱,成为国家信仰体系的天然渠道。本文将运用当代空间理论来揭示这种独特的共生关系是如何帮助5%的人构建三类神圣空间的,以及说唱如何继续作为团结这个群体的粘合剂,并抓住新一代的想象力。说唱不仅仅是这一新的宗教运动的公众形象,它还提供了实体的集会空间,通过对神圣历史的阐述和背景化,建立了意识形态的神圣空间,并继续为创造一个新的、理想化的公正的世界秩序创造愿景。广泛的新研究追溯了这一流派的起源,从被边缘化的城市青年到今天强大而著名的说唱艺术家,包括Jay Z, Busta Rhymes和Wu Tang Clan。Nation乐队和嘻哈乐队都走向了全球,佛教、犹太教和穆斯林说唱歌手在创造新的文化空间的同时,也在为社会变革传播一种强有力的、积极的反文化信息——这证明了那句格言:永远不要低估音乐对宗教意识的力量。会议论文系列:ART2018-2571
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Creating Sacred Spaces: The Power of Rap Music on the Religioius Consciousness
Rap music is the sound and soul of the Hip Hop culture—a powerful social, musical, and political phenomenon of the late twentieth century. Born among the youth in the poor districts of New York, the genre has extensive roots: Puerto Rican, Latino, and Jamaican sounds, African tribal drumming, spoken poetry of the 1930s Harlem renaissance, blues music, spirituals, slam poetry, and oratory of the Civil Rights Movement. Developing right along-side this musical genre was the Five Percent Nation, a relatively unknown off-shoot of the Nation of Islam, that embraced the hip hop culture from its inception. God Hop, as some call the rap associated with the Five Percenters, became a natural conduit for the Nationʼs belief system. This paper will employ contemporary spatial theory to reveal how this unique symbiosis aided the construction of three categories of sacred space for the Five Percenters and how rap continues to serve as the glue that unites the group and also captures the imagination of new generations. More than just the public face of this new religious movement, rap provides physical gathering space, establishes ideological sacred space by articulating and contextuatizing sacred history, and continues to cast a vision for creation of a new, idealized just world order. Extensive new research traces the genre from its inception among marginalized, inner-city youth to the powerful prestigious rap artists of today, including Jay Z, Busta Rhymes, and the Wu Tang Clan. Both the Nation and Hip Hop have gone global, with Buddhist, Jewish, and Muslim rap artists also creating new cultural spaces while spreading a powerful, positive counter-culture message for social change—proving the adage: never underestimate the power of music on the religious consciousness. ATINER CONFERENCE PAPER SERIES No: ART2018-2571
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