University of Bath, United Kingdom.
Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa, London School of Economics, United Kingdom.
Disasters. 2025 Jan;49(1):e12662. doi: 10.1111/disa.12662. Epub 2024 Oct 23.
Understanding the politics of famine is crucial to understanding why famines still occur. A key part of this is how famine is remembered, understood, and discussed. This paper focuses on songs popular among communities that have recently experienced deadly famine. Contemporary famines almost always manifest in armed conflict contexts, where there is limited political freedom. Here, songs and music can be an important way to debate sensitive political issues. This paper focuses on the way that songs and music shape 'regimes of truth' around famine, and who is shamed and held accountable for associated suffering. It is based on long-term ethnographic research, the recordings of famine-related songs, and collaborative analysis in Jonglei and Warrap States (South Sudan) in 2021-24. The paper shows how songs can mock soldiers for their seizing of assets during times of hunger and how they can create familial shame for famine suffering, shifting responsibility away from the real causes to family members.
理解饥荒的政治背景对于理解为何饥荒仍在发生至关重要。其中一个关键部分是如何记住、理解和讨论饥荒。本文主要关注最近经历过致命饥荒的社区中流行的歌曲。当代饥荒几乎总是出现在武装冲突背景下,在这种背景下,政治自由受到限制。在这里,歌曲和音乐可以成为辩论敏感政治问题的重要方式。本文重点关注歌曲和音乐如何围绕饥荒形成“真理制度”,以及谁因相关苦难而感到羞耻并被追究责任。它基于长期的民族志研究、与饥荒相关的歌曲录音,以及 2021-24 年在琼莱州和瓦拉卜州(南苏丹)的合作分析。本文表明,歌曲可以嘲笑士兵在饥饿时期夺取资产,也可以为饥荒带来的苦难创造家庭耻辱,将责任从真正的原因转移到家庭成员身上。