An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s

The censorship of popular music in South Africa during the 1980s severely affected South African musicians. The apartheid government was directly involved in centralized state censorship by means of the Directorate of Publications, while the South African Broadcasting Corporation exercised governmen...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Drewett, Michael
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007098
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-33502018-08-31T04:12:37ZAn analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980sDrewett, MichaelCensorship -- South AfricaPopular music -- Censorship -- South AfricaPopular music -- Censorship -- South Africa -- HistoryPopular music -- Social aspects -- South AfricaPopular music -- Political aspects -- South AfricaPopular music -- South Africa -- History and criticismProtest songs -- South Africa -- History and criticismThe censorship of popular music in South Africa during the 1980s severely affected South African musicians. The apartheid government was directly involved in centralized state censorship by means of the Directorate of Publications, while the South African Broadcasting Corporation exercised government censorship at the level of airplay. Others who assisted state censorship included religious and cultural interest groups. State censorship in turn put pressure on record companies, musicians and others to practice self-censorship. Many musicians who overtly sang about taboo topics or who used controversial language subsequently experienced censorship in different forms, including police harassment. Musicians were also subject to anti-apartheid forms of censorship,such as the United Nations endorsed cultural boycott. Not all instances of censorship were overtly political, but they were always framed by, and took place within, a repressive legal-political system. This thesis found that despite the state's attempt to maintain its hegemony, musicians sought ways of overcoming censorship practices. It is argued that the ensuing struggle cannot be conceived of in simple binary terms. The works of Antonio Gramsci, Michel Foucault and Pierre Bourdieu, in particular, are applied to the South African context in exploring the localized nuances of the cultural struggle over music censorship. It is argued that fragmented resistance to censorship arose out of the very censorship structures that attempted to silence musicians. Textual analysis brought to light that resistance took various forms including songs with provocative lyrics and titles, and more subtle means of bypassing censorship, including the use of symbolism, camouflaged lyrics, satire and crossover performance. Musicians were faced with the challenge of bypassing censors yet nevertheless conveying their message to an audience. The most successful cases negotiated censorial practices while getting an apparent message across to a wide audience. Broader forms of resistance were also explored, including opposition through live performance, counter-hegemonic information on record covers, resistance from exile, alignment with political organizations and legal challenges to state censorship. In addition, some record companies developed strategies of resistance to censorship. The many innovative practices outlined in this thesis demonstrate that even in the context of constraint, resistance is possible. Despite censorship, South African musicians were able to express themselves through approaching their music in an innovative way.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Sociology and Industrial Sociology2004ThesisDoctoralPhD375 leavespdfvital:3350http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007098EnglishDrewett, Michael
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Censorship -- South Africa
Popular music -- Censorship -- South Africa
Popular music -- Censorship -- South Africa -- History
Popular music -- Social aspects -- South Africa
Popular music -- Political aspects -- South Africa
Popular music -- South Africa -- History and criticism
Protest songs -- South Africa -- History and criticism
spellingShingle Censorship -- South Africa
Popular music -- Censorship -- South Africa
Popular music -- Censorship -- South Africa -- History
Popular music -- Social aspects -- South Africa
Popular music -- Political aspects -- South Africa
Popular music -- South Africa -- History and criticism
Protest songs -- South Africa -- History and criticism
Drewett, Michael
An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
description The censorship of popular music in South Africa during the 1980s severely affected South African musicians. The apartheid government was directly involved in centralized state censorship by means of the Directorate of Publications, while the South African Broadcasting Corporation exercised government censorship at the level of airplay. Others who assisted state censorship included religious and cultural interest groups. State censorship in turn put pressure on record companies, musicians and others to practice self-censorship. Many musicians who overtly sang about taboo topics or who used controversial language subsequently experienced censorship in different forms, including police harassment. Musicians were also subject to anti-apartheid forms of censorship,such as the United Nations endorsed cultural boycott. Not all instances of censorship were overtly political, but they were always framed by, and took place within, a repressive legal-political system. This thesis found that despite the state's attempt to maintain its hegemony, musicians sought ways of overcoming censorship practices. It is argued that the ensuing struggle cannot be conceived of in simple binary terms. The works of Antonio Gramsci, Michel Foucault and Pierre Bourdieu, in particular, are applied to the South African context in exploring the localized nuances of the cultural struggle over music censorship. It is argued that fragmented resistance to censorship arose out of the very censorship structures that attempted to silence musicians. Textual analysis brought to light that resistance took various forms including songs with provocative lyrics and titles, and more subtle means of bypassing censorship, including the use of symbolism, camouflaged lyrics, satire and crossover performance. Musicians were faced with the challenge of bypassing censors yet nevertheless conveying their message to an audience. The most successful cases negotiated censorial practices while getting an apparent message across to a wide audience. Broader forms of resistance were also explored, including opposition through live performance, counter-hegemonic information on record covers, resistance from exile, alignment with political organizations and legal challenges to state censorship. In addition, some record companies developed strategies of resistance to censorship. The many innovative practices outlined in this thesis demonstrate that even in the context of constraint, resistance is possible. Despite censorship, South African musicians were able to express themselves through approaching their music in an innovative way.
author Drewett, Michael
author_facet Drewett, Michael
author_sort Drewett, Michael
title An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
title_short An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
title_full An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
title_fullStr An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in South Africa during the 1980s
title_sort analysis of the censorship of popular music within the context of cultural struggle in south africa during the 1980s
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007098
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