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Dark Side of the Tune: Popular Music and Violence (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,361
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Dark Side of the Tune: Popular Music and Violence (Hardcover)
Series: Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Written against the academically dominant but simplistic
romanticization of popular music as a positive force, this book
focuses on the 'dark side' of the subject. It is a pioneering
examination of the ways in which popular music has been deployed in
association with violence, ranging from what appears to be an
incidental relationship, to one in which music is explicitly
applied as an instrument of violence. A preliminary overview of the
physiological and cognitive foundations of sounding/hearing which
are distinctive within the sensorium, discloses in particular their
potential for organic and psychic violence. The study then
elaborates working definitions of key terms (including the vexed
idea of the 'popular') for the purposes of this investigation, and
provides a historical survey of examples of the nexus between music
and violence, from (pre)Biblical times to the late nineteenth
century. The second half of the book concentrates on the modern
era, marked in this case by the emergence of technologies by which
music can be electronically augmented, generated, and disseminated,
beginning with the advent of sound recording from the 1870s, and
proceeding to audio-internet and other contemporary
audio-technologies. Johnson and Cloonan argue that these
technologies have transformed the potential of music to mediate
cultural confrontations from the local to the global, particularly
through violence. The authors present a taxonomy of case histories
in the connection between popular music and violence, through
increasingly intense forms of that relationship, culminating in the
topical examples of music and torture, including those in Bosnia,
Darfur, and by US forces in Iraq and GuantA!namo Bay. This,
however, is not simply a succession of data, but an argumentative
synthesis. Thus, the final section debates the implications of this
nexus both for popular music studies itself, and also in cultural
policy and regulation, the ethics of citizenship, and arguments
about human rights.
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