{"title":"“Maisha yetu ya kila siku kama vile movie”:坦桑尼亚音乐录影带中的幻想、欲望和城市空间","authors":"D. Kerr","doi":"10.1386/jac_00018_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract An explosion of creative practices in music, film and video production followed the liberalization of the Tanzanian media in the early 1990s. Concerned about cultural imperialism, Tanzania's first president Julius Nyerere had resisted allowing television in mainland\n Tanzania and consequently the first licence was only granted in 1994. Following the establishment of the first TV station there has been a proliferation of TV station and online platforms circulating the new genre of popular music videos. During the last decade, new media spaces, including\n continent-wide TV channels such as Channel O and MTV Africa (both based in South Africa), have created new circuits for the circulation of Tanzanian music videos. New media spaces enabled by liberalization have become sites for negotiating gendered, moral and sociopolitical value. They also\n serve as imaginative sites of desire and fantasy. Music videos set in the cinematic space of Dar es Salaam's new high-rise buildings and 'exclusive' clubs have become something of a trope in Tanzania. These videos display fantasies of enjoyment and consumption. In so doing, they reflect neo-liberal\n and individual modes of wealth accumulation which challenge accepted social norms about consumption and wealth. Examining these new contemporary cinematic representations of the city as spaces of fantasy and desire, this article will explore the modes of spectatorship audiences bring to these\n videos. It will examine how audiences, largely excluded from these exclusive city spaces of consumption and excess, read cityscapes in music videos. This article ultimately sets out the multiplicity, ambiguity and indeterminacy of the desires (both creative and destructive) evoked in audiences\n by contemporary music video.","PeriodicalId":41188,"journal":{"name":"Journal of African Cinemas","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2019-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"'Maisha yetu ya kila siku kama vile movie': Fantasy, desire and urban space in Tanzanian music videos\",\"authors\":\"D. Kerr\",\"doi\":\"10.1386/jac_00018_1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Abstract An explosion of creative practices in music, film and video production followed the liberalization of the Tanzanian media in the early 1990s. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
20世纪90年代初,随着坦桑尼亚媒体的自由化,音乐、电影和视频制作领域的创造性实践出现了爆炸式增长。由于担心文化帝国主义,坦桑尼亚首任总统朱利叶斯•尼雷尔(Julius Nyerere)拒绝在坦桑尼亚大陆开设电视,因此直到1994年才颁发了第一张牌照。随着第一家电视台的成立,传播流行音乐视频这种新类型的电视台和网络平台激增。在过去十年中,新的媒体空间,包括遍及整个大陆的电视频道,如O频道和MTV非洲(均设在南非),为坦桑尼亚音乐录影带的传播创造了新的途径。自由主义催生的新媒体空间已经成为讨论性别、道德和社会政治价值的场所。它们也是欲望和幻想的想象场所。在达累斯萨拉姆(Dar es Salaam)新建的高层建筑和“专属”俱乐部的电影空间中拍摄的音乐视频已经成为坦桑尼亚的一种比喻。这些视频展示了享受和消费的幻想。在这样做的过程中,它们反映了新自由主义和个人财富积累模式,挑战了关于消费和财富的公认社会规范。通过审视这些将城市作为幻想和欲望空间的新当代电影表现形式,本文将探索观众带给这些视频的观看模式。它将研究那些基本上被排除在这些消费和过度的专属城市空间之外的观众如何在音乐视频中阅读城市景观。本文最终阐述了当代音乐录像在观众心中唤起的欲望(既有创造性的,也有破坏性的)的多样性、模糊性和不确定性。
'Maisha yetu ya kila siku kama vile movie': Fantasy, desire and urban space in Tanzanian music videos
Abstract An explosion of creative practices in music, film and video production followed the liberalization of the Tanzanian media in the early 1990s. Concerned about cultural imperialism, Tanzania's first president Julius Nyerere had resisted allowing television in mainland
Tanzania and consequently the first licence was only granted in 1994. Following the establishment of the first TV station there has been a proliferation of TV station and online platforms circulating the new genre of popular music videos. During the last decade, new media spaces, including
continent-wide TV channels such as Channel O and MTV Africa (both based in South Africa), have created new circuits for the circulation of Tanzanian music videos. New media spaces enabled by liberalization have become sites for negotiating gendered, moral and sociopolitical value. They also
serve as imaginative sites of desire and fantasy. Music videos set in the cinematic space of Dar es Salaam's new high-rise buildings and 'exclusive' clubs have become something of a trope in Tanzania. These videos display fantasies of enjoyment and consumption. In so doing, they reflect neo-liberal
and individual modes of wealth accumulation which challenge accepted social norms about consumption and wealth. Examining these new contemporary cinematic representations of the city as spaces of fantasy and desire, this article will explore the modes of spectatorship audiences bring to these
videos. It will examine how audiences, largely excluded from these exclusive city spaces of consumption and excess, read cityscapes in music videos. This article ultimately sets out the multiplicity, ambiguity and indeterminacy of the desires (both creative and destructive) evoked in audiences
by contemporary music video.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of African Cinemas will explore the interactions of visual and verbal narratives in African film. It recognizes the shifting paradigms that have defined and continue to define African cinemas. Identity and perception are interrogated in relation to their positions within diverse African film languages. The editors are seeking papers that expound on the identity or identities of Africa and its peoples represented in film. The aim is to create a forum for debate that will promote inter-disciplinarity between cinema and other visual and rhetorical forms of representation.