ABSTRACT

This book focuses on how in/security works in and through Jamaican dancehall, and on the insights that Jamaican dancehall offers for the global study of in/security.

This collection draws together a multi-disciplinary range of key scholars in in/security and dancehall. Scholars from the University of the West Indies' Institute of Caribbean Studies and Reggae Studies Unit, as well as independent dancehall and dance practitioners from Kingston, and writers from the UK, US and continental Europe offer their differently situated perspectives on dancehall, its histories, spatial patterning, professional status and aesthetics.

The study brings together critical security studies with dancehall studies and will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners in theatre, dance and performance studies, sociology, cultural geography, anthropology, postcolonial studies, diaspora studies, musicology and gender studies.

chapter 3|19 pages

Me badi a fe me BMW (my body is my BMW)

Engaging the badi (body) to interrogate the shifting in/securities within the co-culture daaance'all

chapter 5|12 pages

The mask for survival

A discourse in dancehall regalia

chapter 6|23 pages

Dancehall dancing bodies

The performance of embodied in/security

chapter 9|20 pages

‘Sounding' out the system

Noise, in/security and the politics of citizenship 1