Dread Talk: The Rastafarians' Linguistic Response to Societal Oppression

Opposed to the repressive socio-economic political climate that resulted in the impoverishment of masses of Jamaicans, the Jamaican Rastafarians developed a language to resist societal oppression. This study examines that language--Dread Talk--as resistive language. Having determined that the othe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Manget-Johnson, Carol Anne
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_theses/44
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1043&context=english_theses
Description
Summary:Opposed to the repressive socio-economic political climate that resulted in the impoverishment of masses of Jamaicans, the Jamaican Rastafarians developed a language to resist societal oppression. This study examines that language--Dread Talk--as resistive language. Having determined that the other variations spoken in their community--Standard Jamaican English and Jamaican Creole--were inadequate to express their dispossessed circumstances, the Rastafarians forged an identity through their language that represents a resistant philosophy, music and religion. This resistance not only articulates their socio-political state, but also commands global attention. This study scrutinizes the lexical, phonological, and syntactical structures of the poetic music discourse of Dread Talk, the conscious deliberate fashioning of a language that purposefully expresses resistance to the political and social ideology of their native land, Jamaica.