![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
Based on the author's research in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and other urban areas in Vietnam, this study of contemporary Vietnamese popular music explores the ways globalization and free market economics have influenced the music and subcultures of Vietnamese youth, focusing on the conflict between the politics of remembering, nurtured by the Vietnamese Communist government, and the politics of forgetting driven by the capitalist interests of the music industry. Vietnamese youth at the end of the second and beginning of the third millennium are influenced by the challenges generated by a number of seemingly opposite ideologies and realities, such as "the past" versus "the present," socialism versus capitalism, and cultural traditionalism versus globalization. Vietnam has undergone a radical demographic shift with a very pronounced youth movement, and consequently, Vietnamese popular culture has been radically reshaped by a young population coming of age in the twenty-first century. As Olsen reveals, the way Vietnamese young people cope with these opposing and contrasting forces is often expressed in their active and passive music making.
Based on the author's research in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and other urban areas in Vietnam, this study of contemporary Vietnamese popular music explores the ways globalization and free market economics have influenced the music and subcultures of Vietnamese youth, focusing on the conflict between the politics of remembering, nurtured by the Vietnamese Communist government, and the politics of forgetting driven by the capitalist interests of the music industry. Vietnamese youth at the end of the second and beginning of the third millennium are influenced by the challenges generated by a number of seemingly opposite ideologies and realities, such as "the past" versus "the present," socialism versus capitalism, and cultural traditionalism versus globalization. Vietnam has undergone a radical demographic shift with a very pronounced youth movement, and consequently, Vietnamese popular culture has been radically reshaped by a young population coming of age in the twenty-first century. As Olsen reveals, the way Vietnamese young people cope with these opposing and contrasting forces is often expressed in their active and passive music making.
In many places around the world, flutes and the sounds of flutes
are powerful magical forces for seduction and love, protection,
vegetal and human fertility, birth and death, and other aspects of
human and non-human behavior. This book explores the cultural
significance of flutes, flute playing, and flute players from
around the world as interpreted from folktales, myths, and other
stories--in a word, "flutelore." A scholarly yet readable study,
World Flutelore: Folktales, Myths, and Other Stories of Magical
Flute Power draws upon a range of sources in folklore,
anthropology, ethnomusicology, and literary analysis. Describing
and interpreting many examples of flutes as they are found in
mythology, poetry, lyrics, and other narrative and literary sources
from around the world, veteran ethnomusicologist Dale Olsen seeks
to determine what is singularly distinct or unique about flutes,
flute playing, and flute players in a global context. He shows how
and why world flutes are important for personal, communal,
religious, spiritual, and secular expression and even, perhaps,
existence. This is a book for students, scholars, and any reader
interested in the cultural power of flutes.
In the first comprehensive synthesis of Andean musical instruments, Dale Olsen breathes life and humanity into the music making of pre-Hispanic cultures in the northern and central Andes. He assesses three decades' worth of anthropological findings from diverse collections, museums, tombs, and temples. Although the instruments, ranging from the ceramic flutes of the Sinu and Tairona and the panpipes of the Paracas and Nasca to the Moche's rattles, drums, and conch shell trumpets, are analyzed in great detail, Olsen's is original among studies of pre-Columbian music in that it takes an interpretive rather than a purely descriptive approach. What did music mean in the lives of these pre-Columbians? Part musical quest, part adventure of the mind, he considers not only why and when the instruments were played, but exactly how. Enhancing the text are fascinating illustrations of more than 80 archaeological musical instruments and ancient artifacts, many never before reproduced in books available in the United States.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Ratels Aan Die Lomba - Die Storie Van…
Leopold Scholtz
Paperback
![]()
Better Choices - Ensuring South Africa's…
Greg Mills, Mcebisi Jonas, …
Paperback
|