The “Black Pacific” and decolonisation in Melanesia: Performing négritude and indigènitude

Authors

  • Camellia Webb-Gannon Western Sydney University
  • Michael Webb The University of Sydney
  • Gabriel Solis University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.127.2.177-206

Abstract

In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mela = black; nesia = islands). Emerging scholarship on the Black Pacific focuses on historical and contemporary identifications and articulations between Oceanian and African diasporic peoples, cultures and politics based upon shared Otherness to colonial occupiers. This essay contributes to such scholarship by presenting a perspective from Melanesia with a focus on music, a popular form of countercolonial expression. It examines in two broad phases person-to-person and person-to-text encounters with Atlantic-based notions of Black Power and négritude. The Pacific War serves as a dividing line and turning point, during and following which such encounters began to intensify. The discussion links these African diasporic intellectual traditions/discourses/epistemologies with that of indigènitude, that is, performed global expressions of Indigenousness, through allusions to Black transnationalism and the ways both movements address the “inferiority confusion” that arose from experiences of colonisation. It demonstrates how in the last 35 years in particular, Melanesians have worked to invert the demeaning intention of their colonial racial construction and, in the process, have helped to create what may now be thought of as the Black Pacific.

Author Biographies

Camellia Webb-Gannon, Western Sydney University

Camellia Webb-Gannon is a Research Fellow with the Digital Research Group at Western Sydney University and is the Coordinator of the West Papua Project at the University of Sydney. She is the recipient of the Australian Research Council Linkage Grant (2015–18), Music, Mobile Phones and Community Justice in Melanesia.

Michael Webb, The University of Sydney

Michael Webb lectures in ethnomusicology and music education at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, The University of Sydney. His article on Melanesian hymnody won the Journal of Pacific History best article prize for 2015.

Gabriel Solis, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Gabriel Solis is Professor of Music, African American Studies, and Anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His current book project, The Black Pacific: Music, Politics, and Afro-Indigenous Connections in Australia and Melanesia, is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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Published

2018-06-30

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Articles