KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies
Positioning music as a site of salvage and reinvention, the paper critiques the neglect of sonospoetic knowledge in Caribbean climate scholarship. I argue that creative practices allow islanders to access otherwise hidden dimensions of life, inaugurating alternative socialities and epistemologies of being. By focusing on the materiality and innovation of musical instruments and the organization of humans, the paper suggests that music shapes and nurtures island interiorities that promotes a more attuned, compassionate, and relational way of inhabiting the world. Examining how sensuous experiences, arising from Caribbean music practices, function as epistemologies that generate new philosophical and political possibilities, I posit that embracing sonospoetic knowledge in Caribbean climate research opens new avenues and thresholds for envisioning Caribbean futures.
Dr. Charissa Granger analyses Afro-Caribbean music as liberatory practices, examining music epistemologies, aesthetics, love ethics, and erotic knowledge. Granger earned a bachelor’s in visual and performing arts from Northern Illinois University and a master’s in cultural musicology from The University of Amsterdam. With a cultural musicology doctorate from Georg-August Universität Göttingen, Granger held a Marie Skłodowska-Curie postdoctoral fellowship at Erasmus University Rotterdam and is a lecturer in cultural studies at The University of the West Indies. As a postdoctoral researcher in the NWO-funded Island(er)s at the Helm project, Granger collaborates on research for sustainable and inclusive solutions to climate challenges in the (Dutch) Caribbean. Granger is co-editor of Music moves: Musical dynamics of relation, knowledge and transformation (Georg Olms Verlag 2016) and their published work can be found in the Langston Hughes Review, Contemporary Music Review, Conflict and Society, and Esferas Journal. Granger’s teaching includes undergraduate and graduate courses on Caribbean cultural studies and cultural thought, Theorizing Caribbean culture, and Methods of inquiry in Caribbean research.
Prof. dr. Francio Guadeloupe holds the KNAW-UvA Endowed Chair in the Public Anthropology of Kingdom Relations. Francio is a social & cultural anthropologist and a senior researcher at KITLV. Through his chair he is also affiliated with the anthropology department of the University of Amsterdam. He is author of the monographs Chanting down the New Jerusalem: Calypso, christianity, and capitalism in the Caribbean (University of California Press, 2009) and Black man in the Netherlands: An Afro-Antillean anthropology (University Press of Mississippi, 2022).
This seminar is a hybrid event and will be held in room 1.30 at KITLV (Herta Mohr Building, Witte Singel 27A, 2311 BG Leiden) and online via Zoom, on Tuesday 15 October from 15.30-17.00 PM (CET).
1. On location: if you want to join this seminar on location, please register via: [email protected].
2. Online: if you wish to join this webinar online, please register here.
Instruments. Photo by Charissa Granger.