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Ethnomusicology and its Intimacies situates intimacy, a concept
that encompasses a wide range of often informal social practices
and processes for building closeness and relationality, within the
ethnomusicological study of music and sound. These scholarly essays
reflect on a range of interactions between individuals and
communities that deepen connections and associations, and which may
be played out relatively briefly or nurtured over time. Three major
sections on Performance, Auto/biographical strategies, and Film are
each prefaced by an interview with a scholar or practitioner with
close knowledge of the subject that links the chapters in that
section. Often drawing directly on fieldwork experience in a
variety of contexts, authors consider how concepts of intimacy can
illuminate the ethnographic study of music, addressing questions
such as: how can we understand ethnomusicological and ethnographic
research and performance as processes of musically-mediated
intimacy? How are the longstanding relationships we develop with
others particularly intimated by and through musicking? How do we
understand the musically intimate relationships of others and how
do these inflect our own musical intimacies? How does music
represent, inscribe, constrain or provoke social or personal
intimacies in particular contexts? The volume will appeal to all
scholars with interests in music and how it is used to construct
relationships in different contexts around the world.
The Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) is more than a musical event that
ostensibly "unites European people" through music. It is a
spectacle: a performative event that allegorically represents the
idea of "Europe." Since its beginning in the Cold War era, the
contest has functioned as a symbolic realm for the performance of
European selves and the negotiation of European identities. Through
the ESC, Europe is experienced, felt, and imagined in singing and
dancing as the interplay of tropes of being local and/or European
is enacted. In Empire of Song: Europe and Nation in the Eurovision
Song Contest, contributors interpret the ESC as a musical
"mediascape" and mega-event that has variously performed and
performs the changing visions of the European project. Through the
study of the cultural politics of the ESC, contributors discuss the
ways in which music operates as a dynamic nexus for making national
identities and European sensibilities, generating processes of
"assimilation" or "integration," and defining the celebrated notion
of the "European citizen" in a global context. Scholars in the
volume also explore the ways otherness and difference are produced,
spectacularized, challenged, or even neglected in the televised
musical realities of the ESC. For the contributing authors, song
serves as a site for constituting Europe and the nation, on- and
offstage. History and politics, as well as the constant production
of European subjectivities, are sounded in song. The Eurovision
song is a shifting realm where old and new states imagine their
pasts, question their presents, and envision ideal futures in the
New Europe. Essays in Empire of Song adopt theoretical and
epistemological orientations in their exploration of "popular
music" within ethnomusicology and critical musicology, questioning
the idea of "Europe" and the "nation" through and in music, at a
time when the European self appears more fragmented, if not
entirely shattered. Bringing together ethnomusicology, music
studies, history, social anthropology, feminist theory,
linguistics, media ethnography, postcolonial theory, comparative
literature, and philosophy, Empire of Song will interest students
and scholars in a vast array of disciplines.
Made in Greece: Studies in Popular Music serves as a comprehensive
and thorough introduction to the history, sociology, and musicology
of contemporary Greek popular music. Each essay covers the major
figures, styles, and social contexts of pop music in Greece, first
presenting a general description of the history and background of
popular music in Greece, followed by essays, written by leading
scholars of Greek music, that are organized into thematic sections:
Hugely Popular, Art-song Trajectories, Greekness beyond Greekness,
Counter Stories, and Present Musical Pasts.
Made in Greece: Studies in Popular Music serves as a comprehensive
and thorough introduction to the history, sociology, and musicology
of contemporary Greek popular music. Each essay covers the major
figures, styles, and social contexts of pop music in Greece, first
presenting a general description of the history and background of
popular music in Greece, followed by essays, written by leading
scholars of Greek music, that are organized into thematic sections:
Hugely Popular, Art-song Trajectories, Greekness beyond Greekness,
Counter Stories, and Present Musical Pasts.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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