Bahlabelelelani – Why Do They Sing?

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A01=Nompumelelo Zondi
African feminist theory
Author_Nompumelelo Zondi
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Category=CFB
Category=GTM
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Child Support Grants
Contemporary Society
Contemporary Women's Songs
Contemporary Women’s Songs
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ethnomusicology
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Gender Studies
Hidden Transcripts
indigenous women song analysis
Johannesburg High Court
Lazy People
Marcel Jousse
Married Women
Mnemotechnical Devices
Music
Oral Style
patriarchal societies
Portuguese East Africa
Poststructuralist Feminism
Public Transcript
qualitative fieldwork
rural gender dynamics
South African Music
Thabo Mbeki
Traditional Marriage System
Violate
Women and girls
Women Sing
Women's Songs
Yoruba Women
Young Man
Zulu Culture
Zulu oral traditions
Zulu People
Zulu Society
Zulu Women

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032630861
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 May 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Indigenous societies, steeped in patriarchy, have various channels through which they deal with abusive characteristics of relations in some of these communities. One such route is through songs, which sanction women to voice that which, bound by societal expectations, they would not commonly be able to say.

This book focuses on the nature of women’s contemporary songs in the rural community of Zwelibomvu, near Pinetown in KwaZulu-Natal. It aims to answer the question ‘Bahlabelelelani – Why do they sing?’, drawing on several discourses of gender and power to examine the content and purposes of the songs. Restricted by custom, women resort to allusive languages, such as found in ukushoza, a song genre that includes poetic elements and solo dance songs. The songs, when read in conjunction with the interviews and focus group discussions, present a complex picture of women’s lives in contemporary rural KwaZulu-Natal, and they offer their commentary on what it means to be a woman in this society.

Nompumelelo Zondi is Associate Professor and Head of the Department of African Languages at the University of Pretoria.

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