To Follow Bousaadiya

Author:

Tayeb Leila1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern University in Qatar Doha Qatar

Abstract

Abstract This article takes the figure of Bousaadiya, once performed in varying iterations throughout central North Africa, as an entry point to approach the problematics of mobility and memory in Libya. Bousaadiya performance, a multidimensional set of practices that I read critically as dance, produces an embodied social ground upon which Libyans have enacted and contested racialized practices of belonging and a mobile gravesite where it is possible to interrogate regional histories of enslavement and their material and symbolic legacies. While reading Bousaadiya performance enables an excavation of the trans-Saharan slave trade and its ghostly e/affects, performing Bousaadiya enabled the incomplete burial of these through surrogation, easing particular losses. In this article, I explore both of these aspects of the performativity of Bousaadiya’s dance, which is underscored by the forms of remembering it that continue to proliferate. To follow Bousaadiya is to grapple with the ongoing unresolvedness in Libyan cultural politics of the country’s histories of slave economies and the hierarchies left in their wake and to gesture toward the prospect of repair.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies

Reference29 articles.

1. Ahmed, Sara (2004). The Cultural Politics of Emotion. New York: Routledge, 2004.

2. Al-ʿAneizi, Ahmed (date unknown). Busaʿdia. Huna Benghazi. honabenghazi.com.ly/index.php/‮البيت-الثقافي/مقالات/بوسعدية‬‎

3. Al-ʿAreibi, Khalil (2002). Raqsat Libiya: Dirasa fi Funun al-Raqs al-Shaʿbi [Libyan Dances: A Study in the Arts of Popular Dance]. Benghazi: Council for the Development of Cultural Creativity.

4. Al-Saʿdi, Sundus (2016). Where is Bousaadia’s House? http://www.ne9ash.com/archives/5078, last accessed 29 September 2017.

5. Altaleb, Amal M. (2015). The Social and Economic History of Slavery in Libya (1800–1950). Ph.D. dissertation, University of Manchester.

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