What Jamaican Universities Teach Mento Music History? Jamaican universities such as The University of the West Indies (UWI), Edna Manley College, and Northern Caribbean University have integrated mento music history into their cultural studies, music education, and performing arts curricula—serving as academic stewards of the island’s foundational genre.
As the origin of recorded Jamaican popular music, mento provides a crucial lens through which to understand the country’s musical evolution, cultural identity, and oral heritage. Today, various Jamaican universities have made significant strides in documenting, analyzing, and teaching mento music, especially through interdisciplinary programs that blend ethnomusicology, folklore, and performance. This article surveys the primary institutions where mento history is academically engaged.
Emphasis: Theoretical and historical understanding of mento in society.
Library special collections house field notes and archives from key researchers like Olive Lewin and Edward Seaga.
Strong emphasis on embodied learning and performance-based assessment.
Focus: Integrating music education with community heritage revival.
At institutions like UWI and Edna Manley, mento-related topics are regularly explored through:
Topics include:
- Mento’s influence on reggae and ska,
- Language and humor in mento lyrics,
- Gender and identity in mento performance.
Jamaican universities are increasingly recognizing mento as an academic priority—not merely as a nostalgic genre, but as a scholarly resource embodying history, identity, and resistance. From Edna Manley’s stages to UWI’s archives, mento lives on as both subject and sound, taught to ensure that future generations understand Jamaica’s first musical voice within and beyond the academy.