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Island Time

Speed and the Archipelago from St. Kitts and Nevis

Island Time

Speed and the Archipelago from St. Kitts and Nevis

A close look at how wylers, a popular musical style from the island of St. Kitts and Nevis, expresses a unique mode of relation in the postcolonial Caribbean.
 
In Island Time, ethnomusicologist Jessica Swanston Baker examines wylers, a musical form from St. Kitts and Nevis that is characterized by speed. Baker argues that this speed becomes a useful and highly subjective metric for measuring the relationship between Caribbean aspirations and the promises of economic modernity; women’s bodily autonomy and the nationalist fantasies that would seek to curb that autonomy; and the material realities of Kittitian-Nevisian youth living in the disillusionment following postcolonial independence. She traces the wider Caribbean musical, cultural, and media-based resonances of wylers, posing an alternative model to scholarship on Caribbean music that has tended to privilege the big islands—Trinidad, Jamaica, and Haiti—thus neglecting not only the unique cultural worlds of smaller nations but also the unbounded nature of musical exchange in the region. The archipelago emerges as a useful model for apprehending the relationality across scales that governs the temporal and spatial logics that undergird Caribbean performance. The archipelago and its speeds ultimately emerge as a meaningful medium for postcolonial, postmodern world-making.
 

232 pages | 20 halftones, 4 line drawings | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

Black Studies

Music: Ethnomusicology

Reviews

"Theoretically sophisticated and written with a deeply engaging autoethnographic tone, this book is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the (post)colonial dynamics and assumptions that animate defining discourses about small islands’ musical aesthetics in the twenty-first century Caribbean. In a bold and welcome move, Baker critically rethinks what in the West and in former colonies has been typically conceived as polar opposites—big and small islands, slow and fast tempo, women’s restrained and exuberant behaviors. In contrast, this book foregrounds the horizontal web of island relations, its forever ongoing transformation of conventions, and its sounding of familiarity and difference that produce the unmistakable feeling of Caribbeanness. An insightful and significant achievement!"

Jocelyne Guilbault, University of California, Berkeley

"Drawing on Caribbean philosophy and fine-grained ethnography, Island Time engages with the simultaneity of disjunct regimes of time—the hyperactive beat of wylers music and tourism's promise of languor, developmentalist accounts of backwardness and the hypermodernity of "fast" girls—and a reticulate cultural geography by which the Caribbean archipelago's multitudes are experienced in the small-island nation of St. Kitts-Nevis."

Michael Birenbaum Quintero, Boston University

"There is nothing small about the music that flows from the tiny Leeward islands of St. Kitts and Nevis. Nor can the implications of Jessica Swanston Baker’s Island Time be easily overstated. With graceful pen and shrewd ear, Baker gathers music scholars around a fresh preposition—from—showing just how much where matters in music."

Braxton D. Shelley, Yale University

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction
1 Island Time
2 The Pedagogy of Pace
3 Wylers and the Tempo of Development
4 Archipelagic Listening from the Small Islands
Conclusion: Connecting the Dots

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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