On Wed, Dec 25, 2019 at 9:47 PM Alok Prasanna Kumar <[email protected]>
wrote:

> To add to the already fantastic books on this list (in no particular order)
> ...
> 2. India Moving: A History of Migration by Chinmay Tumbe
>
...

If any of you are interested in the music of the Indian diaspora, this
episode of Afropop Worldwide might be of interest to you:

https://afropop.org/audio-programs/diaspora-encounters-the-indo-caribbean-world

Competition between communities of Indian and African descent has been a
mainstay of politics and culture in the former British colonies of Trinidad
and Tobago, and Guyana. This rivalry plays out in institutions from the
University of the West Indies to the West Indies cricket team, and of
course, popular music. At the time of Trinidad's Independence, the
Afro-Caribbean political elite of the day sought to enshrine calypso as the
country's national music, but new genres have emerged, from the steel-pan
jazz and calypso of the 1960s to soca and its successor, chutney-soca,
which for the first time in the 1980s fully integrated Indian and African
influences in a local popular music. This Hip Deep edition explores all of
these styles, and also the music of diaspora communities in the U.S. and
the U.K.. Ethnomusicologist Peter Manuel of the City University of New York
shares his ground-breaking research on Indo-Caribbean music in all of its
geographic and social contexts. His music and insights reveal a
fascinating, overlooked story of hybrid Caribbean culture.


S.

-- 
Homer: Hey, what does this job pay?
Carl:  Nuthin'.
Homer: D'oh!
Carl:  Unless you're crooked.
Homer: Woo-hoo!

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