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7. Chanting down Babylon: Bob Marley's song as literary text
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Carolyn Cooper
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface: Informing cultural studies: a politics of betrayal? ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction: Oral/sexual discourse in Jamaican popular culture 1
- 1. 'Me know no law, me know no sin': transgressive identities and the voice of innocence: the historical context 19
- 2. 'Culture an tradition an birthright': proverb as metaphor in the poetry of Louise Bennett 37
- 3. That cunny Jarnma oman: representations of female sensibility in the poetry of Louise Bennett 47
- 4. Words unbroken by the beat: the performance poetry of Jean Binta Breeze and Mikey Smith 68
- 5. Writing oral history: Sistren Theatre Collective's Lionheart Gal 87
- 6. Country come to town: Michael Thelwell's The Harder They Come 96
- 7. Chanting down Babylon: Bob Marley's song as literary text 117
- 8. Slackness hiding from culture: erotic play in the dancehall 136
- 9. From 'centre' to 'margin': turning history upside down 174
- Appendix 1: Proverbs from Louise Bennett 200
- Appendix 2: Jamaican proverbs: a gender perspective 202
- Bibliography 205
- Index 210
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface: Informing cultural studies: a politics of betrayal? ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction: Oral/sexual discourse in Jamaican popular culture 1
- 1. 'Me know no law, me know no sin': transgressive identities and the voice of innocence: the historical context 19
- 2. 'Culture an tradition an birthright': proverb as metaphor in the poetry of Louise Bennett 37
- 3. That cunny Jarnma oman: representations of female sensibility in the poetry of Louise Bennett 47
- 4. Words unbroken by the beat: the performance poetry of Jean Binta Breeze and Mikey Smith 68
- 5. Writing oral history: Sistren Theatre Collective's Lionheart Gal 87
- 6. Country come to town: Michael Thelwell's The Harder They Come 96
- 7. Chanting down Babylon: Bob Marley's song as literary text 117
- 8. Slackness hiding from culture: erotic play in the dancehall 136
- 9. From 'centre' to 'margin': turning history upside down 174
- Appendix 1: Proverbs from Louise Bennett 200
- Appendix 2: Jamaican proverbs: a gender perspective 202
- Bibliography 205
- Index 210