1) Two popular Italian musicians, Roy Paci and Raiz, are advocating for a more inclusive vision of Italian identity that incorporates influences from immigration.
2) Their music blends southern Italian styles like Sicilian and Neapolitan with genres like jazz, reggae, and hip hop. They sing in Italian dialects as well as English and Spanish.
3) Both musicians see southern Italian identity as inherently hybrid, shaped by a history of migration and colonialism. They draw parallels between the southern Italian diaspora and more recent immigrant experiences in Italy.
21st Century Wops: Roy Paci, Raiz, and the Cultural Politics of Migration
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2. “ We witness day after day the imbalanced conflict between an Italy that aspires to become European with its head held high…and the forces whose objectives are to become part of the African continent.” -- Umberto Bossi, Lega Nord (Northern League) Italy, a nation that once spawned mass migrations, is becoming a nation of immigrants. New arrivals from the Middle East, Asia, North and sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe now constitute more than six percent of the Italian population. A society that had been largely homogeneous is becoming multicultural. The political right largely opposes this transformation, with the Lega Nord the most vociferous opponent of immigration and cultural change.
3. “ Italy my new Italy Made out of India, Morocco, Albania, Colombia and Senegal” -- Raiz, “W.O.P.” In the midst of the national debates over immigration, two popular, left-wing musicians, Rosario “Roy” Paci and Gennaro Della Volpe, known as Raiz, are articulating a vision of Italian identity that is expansive and inclusive.
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12. Prince Klemens von Metternich As southern Italians, Paci and Raiz are themselves heirs to a historical legacy of colonialism and racist denigration. At the Congress of Vienna in 1814, the Franco-Spanish Bourbons united southern Italy and Sicily into the single Kingdom of Two Sicilies, with Naples as its capital. Prince von Metternich, the defender of the political order established by the Congress, described Sicilians as “half-barbarous, superstitious without limits, fiery and passionate like the Africans.”
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Notas del editor
Presented April 2008 at the Experience Music Project (EMP) Pop Conference in Seattle Presented April 2008 at the Experience Music Project (EMP) Pop Conference in Seattle