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Africa (London. 1928), 2020-08, Vol.90 (4), p.721-745
2020

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Becoming militant: embodying the Guinean revolution and Guinea–China relations
Ist Teil von
  • Africa (London. 1928), 2020-08, Vol.90 (4), p.721-745
Ort / Verlag
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2020
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • This article considers the role of embodied experience in promoting revolutionary ideology in Guinea. The Republic of Guinea has long held close ties with China, and in the 1960s and 1970s the country pursued its own Cultural Revolution. While Chinese songs and aesthetics had little direct artistic influence, the Guinean state embraced Maoist ideals of social and self-transformation and discipline. Such ideals were translated into daily life through the regulation of bodies, including practices of dance, movement and physical gesture that sought to create revolutionary subjects. I show here how embodied practices, including the circulation of dancers and official delegations, cultivated Guinea's relationship with China; and how practices of movement and dance were inwardly experienced within Guinea during its own Cultural Revolution. In so doing, I address some of the contradictions of the Revolution and of Guinea–China relations. While the regime pursued its goals through violence and brutality, former revolutionary subjects today remember the moment for both its pain and its pleasures – for the hardships the body had to endure and for the nationalist pride that many still feel today.

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