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<OAI-PMH schemaLocation=http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/OAI-PMH.xsd> <responseDate>2018-01-15T13:24:45Z</responseDate> <request identifier=oai:revues.org:etudescaribeennes/7113 verb=GetRecord metadataPrefix=oai_dc>http://oai.openedition.org/</request> <GetRecord> <record> <header> <identifier>oai:revues.org:etudescaribeennes/7113</identifier> <datestamp>2016-11-17T17:03:10Z</datestamp> <setSpec>journals</setSpec> <setSpec>journals:etudescaribeennes</setSpec> <setSpec>openaire</setSpec> </header> <metadata> <dc schemaLocation=http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd> <title>Jazz et aspirations collectives : un « call-response » inversé ?</title> <type>info:eu-repo/semantics/article</type> <type>article</type> <creator>Sadikalay, Philippe</creator> <subject lang=fr>analogie</subject> <subject lang=fr>call-response</subject> <subject lang=fr>aspiration collective</subject> <subject lang=fr>musique fonctionnelle</subject> <subject lang=fr>émotion</subject> <subject lang=fr>mouvement social</subject> <subject lang=en>call-response</subject> <subject lang=en>analogy</subject> <subject lang=en>aesthetic</subject> <subject lang=en>collective aspiration</subject> <subject lang=en>functional music</subject> <subject lang=en>emotion</subject> <subject lang=en>social movement</subject> <identifier>urn:doi:10.4000/etudescaribeennes.7113</identifier> <description lang=fr>Le principe de l’antiphonie, appelé communément « call-response » est souvent évoqué dans une configuration contextuelle de l’expression artistique, qu’elle soit littéraire, comme dans les œuvres de Toni Morrison par exemple, ou musicale, dans la plupart des cas. Il se veut le processus par lequel se formateront les modalités de communication entre les membres d’un auditoire et un interprète, un créateur. Cet article propose une approche plus large, plus transversale de cet habitus typique des communautés noires des Amériques, et particulièrement dans les contextes contemporains du Mouvement pour les Droits civiques et du renouveau esthétique du Jazz, consécutive à l’ère Swing.</description> <description lang=en>The principle of antiphony, more commonly known as "call-response" is often mentioned in the contextual configuration of an artistic expression, whether literary, as in Toni Morrison’s novels for example, or in music, in most cases. It represents the process that will frame and format the modalities of communication between members of an audience and a performer, a creator. This article proposes a broader and cross-reading approach of this typical habitus among black communities in the Americas, especially in contemporary contexts of the Civil Rights Movements and of the aesthetic renewal of Jazz, after the Swing era.</description> <publisher>Université des Antilles</publisher> <publisher>Études caribéennes</publisher> <language>fr</language> <date>2015-04-24</date> <identifier>http://journals.openedition.org/etudescaribeennes/7113</identifier> <rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</rights> </dc> </metadata> </record> </GetRecord> </OAI-PMH>