From minstrelsy to the spoken word poet: Oral tradition and postcolonial Nigeria

This paper attempts to trace the influences, interactions, conflations and developmental trajectories that link the ancient art of oral chants, poetry, minstrelsy, and the contemporary and modernist spoken word versifications in practice today in Nigeria. Audience, form, content, and intent have bee...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCogent arts & humanities Vol. 8; no. 1
Main Authors Okoye, Chike, Okoye-Ugwu, Stella
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Abingdon Cogent 01.01.2021
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Taylor & Francis Group
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Summary:This paper attempts to trace the influences, interactions, conflations and developmental trajectories that link the ancient art of oral chants, poetry, minstrelsy, and the contemporary and modernist spoken word versifications in practice today in Nigeria. Audience, form, content, and intent have been pivotal factors in the different epochs that separate the ancient precursors and the present forms in this performance matrix. Through ethnographic and qualitative approaches, and textual analyses, select spoken word poets in contemporaneity have been studied and their verses analyzed for such influences from established traditional forms; validating credence that the ancient forms have built a formidable bulwark of elements and standards that give rise to spoken word poetry fitting for the malaise of the post colony. There has been a dearth of such research scope. Two contemporary spoken word poets with Yoruba (oriki and ijala elements) and Igbo (abu and mbem factors) nationalities are studied in this paper and a nexus has been established that oral tradition has through adequate metamorphoses, augmented a postcolonial tenor and relevance. This study has elicited the use of the spoken word poet as its theoretical anchor.
ISSN:2331-1983
2331-1983
DOI:10.1080/23311983.2021.1933306