Dance Music and Creative Resilience within Prison Walls: Revisiting Cebu's Dancing Prisoners

Social Ethics Society - Journal of Applied Philosophy 2 (5):133-161 (2019)
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Abstract

Using Foucault’s concept of governmentality vis-à-vis Appadurai’s “global ethnoscapes” as frames, I argue for a techno-cultural dimension which brought forth the phenomenon of the “dancing inmates,” an argument against the charge of Filipino colonial mimicry of a Hollywood popular entertainment. Albeit the inmates’ dance routines indeed depict Foucault’s “docile bodies” in his analysis of the modern prison, as pointed out by critics, I am inclined to show how the internet mediation through social media networks awakened a culturally imbibed dance and musical character trait vis-à-vis the jolly cultural disposition of Filipinos. Thus, I view these characteristics as existential responses, hence, ‘creative resilience,’ to the inhuman incarcerating conditions of the prison life through using the art of dance with the aid of media technology. I argue on the role of the internet as the prisoners’ avenue to the outside world that was strategically deprived of them as a form of punishment, and the role of the internet as their last frontier to freedom and to realize their human potentials.

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Menelito Mansueto
Mindanao State University - Iligan Institute of Technology

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References found in this work

Nietzsche, Genealogy, History.Michel Foucault - 2001 - In John Richardson & Brian Leiter (eds.), Nietzsche. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. (139-164).
The Subject and Power.Michel Foucault - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (4):777-795.
The Birth of Tragedy.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1992 [1886] - New York: Oxford University Press UK. Edited by Oscar Levy & William A. Haussmann.
Technologies of the Self.Michel Foucault - 2001 - Filosoficky Casopis 49 (2):319-343.
Κισσβιον.A. M. Dale - 1952 - The Classical Review 2 (3-4):129-132.

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