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An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community

This research explores the dynamics of gender, sexuality and power for women performers within the jazz community in Cape Town. Although the history and development of South African jazz has been extensively researched, very few texts mention the presence and impact of women performers and has yet t...

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Main Author: George, Aimée
Other Authors: Tiffin, Amanda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: College of Music 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author George, Aimée
author2 Tiffin, Amanda
author_browse George, Aimée
Tiffin, Amanda
author_facet Tiffin, Amanda
George, Aimée
author_sort George, Aimée
collection Thesis
description This research explores the dynamics of gender, sexuality and power for women performers within the jazz community in Cape Town. Although the history and development of South African jazz has been extensively researched, very few texts mention the presence and impact of women performers and has yet to include how questions of gender, power and sexuality influence both the cultures of jazz and the experiences of women jazz artists. The current study is strongly influenced by feminist theory, which seeks to uncover experiences obscured by patriarchal epistemologies. A qualitative methodology is used to ensure each narrative remains at the forefront of the research. Interviews were conducted with jazz women musicians involved in various roles within the jazz industry in Cape Town. These semi-structured interviews allow for these women to narrate their turbulent musical journeys. What is revealed and subsequently further explored are the rich identity politics involved in being women “performers”, what is assumed and expected of them, the role “boys clubs” play in their exclusion, and the pressures and implications of stringent gender stereotypes, beauty ideals and vicious hyper-sexualization. Moreover, I explore the analytics of power within this specific culture and its' effect on jazz women. Their accounts reveal how the Cape Town jazz community remains saturated with gender stereotypes and is seemingly committed to continuing violent displays of misogyny. The study argues that despite the prevalence of this misogyny, women jazz artists actively design strategies which skilfully and innovatively allow them to pursue influential careers, deepening the meaning of “jazz” in Cape Town and beyond. The research thus both extends the analysis of feminist jazz theorists in Cape Town, and suggests that understanding the contemporary dynamics of gender and sexuality in South African jazz artists' experience deserves more research.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:03.909Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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publisher College of Music
publisherStr College of Music
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33739 An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community George, Aimée Tiffin, Amanda Bennett, Jane Music This research explores the dynamics of gender, sexuality and power for women performers within the jazz community in Cape Town. Although the history and development of South African jazz has been extensively researched, very few texts mention the presence and impact of women performers and has yet to include how questions of gender, power and sexuality influence both the cultures of jazz and the experiences of women jazz artists. The current study is strongly influenced by feminist theory, which seeks to uncover experiences obscured by patriarchal epistemologies. A qualitative methodology is used to ensure each narrative remains at the forefront of the research. Interviews were conducted with jazz women musicians involved in various roles within the jazz industry in Cape Town. These semi-structured interviews allow for these women to narrate their turbulent musical journeys. What is revealed and subsequently further explored are the rich identity politics involved in being women “performers”, what is assumed and expected of them, the role “boys clubs” play in their exclusion, and the pressures and implications of stringent gender stereotypes, beauty ideals and vicious hyper-sexualization. Moreover, I explore the analytics of power within this specific culture and its' effect on jazz women. Their accounts reveal how the Cape Town jazz community remains saturated with gender stereotypes and is seemingly committed to continuing violent displays of misogyny. The study argues that despite the prevalence of this misogyny, women jazz artists actively design strategies which skilfully and innovatively allow them to pursue influential careers, deepening the meaning of “jazz” in Cape Town and beyond. The research thus both extends the analysis of feminist jazz theorists in Cape Town, and suggests that understanding the contemporary dynamics of gender and sexuality in South African jazz artists' experience deserves more research. 2021-08-12T09:19:31Z 2021-08-12T09:19:31Z 2020 2021-08-10T11:11:22Z Master Thesis Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33739 eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Music
George, Aimée
An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
title_full An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
title_fullStr An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
title_short An exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the Cape Town jazz community
title_sort exploration of the gender and sexual dynamics for women performers in the cape town jazz community
topic Music
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33739
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