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    Rhythms of the Diaspora: A Cultural History of Kizomba, Semba, Zouk, Afrobeat, Afrohouse, and Amapiano, and of Music, Culture, and Politics across the Five PALOP Nations

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    Description

    Rhythms of the Diaspora
    A Practitioner-Scholar History
    Music is rarely just entertainment—it is structure, memory, and survival. From the anti-colonial resistance songs of 1940s Luanda to the digital pulse of modern South African townships, Rhythms of the Diaspora maps a continuous, powerful current of Black Atlantic musical exchange.
    In this groundbreaking volume, practitioner-scholar Edson Monteiro bridges the gap between the academic seminar room and the global dancefloor. The book meticulously unpacks the interconnected histories, political stakes, and sonic evolutions of six foundational genres:
    Semba & Kizomba: The Angolan roots and their complex global evolution.
    Zouk: The crucial French Antillean connection that reshaped continental sounds.
    Afrobeat: The uncompromising, horn-driven political power of Nigeria.
    Afrohouse & Amapiano: The digital township-to-global club trajectories.
    Spanning the unique cultural landscapes of all five PALOP nations—Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Mozambique—as well as West African and Caribbean powerhouses, this work honours the legendary artists who risked exile, censorship, and imprisonment to keep the music alive.
    Enriched by an intimate, autoethnographic look at how rhythm lives inside the body, this text serves as vital maintenance work for a profound cultural legacy. Rigorous, honest, and deeply grounded, *Rhythms of the Diaspora* is an essential guide for scholars, historians, and dancers alike.
    > First Edition, 2026
    > Compiled and written for Kizomba Vibes, Harrow, London.
    >

    Details

    Language

    File format

    PDF

    Paper pages

    55

    Release date

    July 14, 2026

    Content rating

    PG

    Because one book is never enough