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Since 2004, Felix Cotellon, the president of the centre for traditional music and dance on the island of Guadeloupe, has spearheaded a grass roots campaign to see gwoka inscribed on the UNESCOs list of Representative Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanities. The move has been surprising, even controversial. Gwoka, a drum-based music and dance, has been used as a symbol of Guadeloupean cultural identity and resistance against French colonialism since the late 1960s. Moreover, Cotellon has had a long association with separatist activism. However, because Guadeloupe remains a French overseas department without a seat at the UN, the petition to add gwoka to the ICH list had to be sponsored by the French state. Following a successful bid, gwoka is now listed as representative of the culture of a French region. In this article, I draw from my ethnographic work as well as my own involvement in the committee that drafted Guadeloupes application to trace the complex network of individuals, who are shaping gwokas transformation from weapon of national resistance to symbol of humanitys cultural diversity. I argue that these individuals shape and operate within a zone of awkward engagement that allows for the emergence and expression of a postnationalist political subjectivity.

Volumen
22
Número
5
Número de páginas
395-410
Publisher: Routledge
Numero ISSN
13527258 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928409818&doi=10.1080%2f13527258.2015.1028959&partnerID=40&md5=c93fa98ccc866ca91376fe74387ba670
DOI
10.1080/13527258.2015.1028959
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