Negotiating body, sex, and self-fashioning in Fújì music

Authors

  • Stephen Olabanji Boluwaduro University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.24125

Keywords:

Fújì music, sex scripting, identity negotiation, self-fashioning, fe(male) body, Nigeria

Abstract

A growing body of literature interrogating the voluptuous rendering of human sexuality in popular culture has focused on sex scripting in Western films and the commodification of women and their representations in popular media. However, exploration of how linguistic metaphors and innuendoes are deployed to affirm or contest expressions of desires that are sacred, sensitive, or taboo in Fuji music has received little scholarly attention. Of what significance is contesting social structure on sexuality to Fuji as a Nigerian popular musical genre? This empirical study explores this question while drawing on an ethnographic and interpretive literary analysis. Drawing from Hakim’s notion of ‘erotic capital’, the analyses and discussion operationalize the sexual scripting framework, Black feminist thought, and African/Black revolutionary art. I argue that sexual narratives and connotations in Fuji performance are often generated as powerful resources to contest sexual sensitivity and push back on silence on sexuality, negotiate and solicit artistic identity, and exact influence on public conversations on sexuality. By and large, this article affirms the engagement of sensual lyrical content as constitutive of revolutionary art and a social transformative site in which the body is negotiated as a catalyst for sexonomics in the contemporary ‘ear-tearing pant-and-bra’ musical evocations.

Author Biography

  • Stephen Olabanji Boluwaduro, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

    Stephen Olabanji Boluwaduro specializes in African and African diaspora studies, popular culture, and Anglophone literature. His multidisciplinary approach to research focuses on expressive culture, archival artifacts, literary and performance studies with emphasis on verbal art, visual culture and music including Fújì performance, hip hop, and global gospel music. His scholarly interests revolve around interculturality, hybridity, representations and performances of race and nation, youth culture, identity construction, migration, and social formation. Boluwaduro sits on the editorial board of MATATU: Journal for African Culture and Society. Some of his publications have appeared in MATATU: Journal for African Culture and SocietyAfrican Journal of Religion, Philosophy and CultureMuziki: Journal of Music Research in AfricaSociolinguistic Studies and others.

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Published

2023-08-07

How to Cite

Boluwaduro, S. O. (2023). Negotiating body, sex, and self-fashioning in Fújì music. Sociolinguistic Studies, 17(1-3), 159-179. https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.24125