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Using cine-ethnomusicology as a focus, Cineworlding introduces
readers to ways of thinking eco-cinematically. Screens are
omnipresent, we carry digital cinema production equipment in our
pockets, but this screen-based technological revolution has barely
impacted social science scholarship. Mixing existential
phenomenological fiction about social science digital cinema
research practice followed by theoretical reflection and discussion
of methods, this book has emerged from a decade-long inquiry into
cineworlding and a desire to help others produce digital media to
engage creatively with the digital networks that surround us.
The late Dennis Carlson uses the alternative nature of the
Burlington, Vermont-bred band, Phish, and the larger impact of rock
n' roll to look at youth and revolutionary music culture. A History
of Progressive Music and Youth Culture is designed for those who
work with or teach young people to understand the nature and origin
of musical commitment and devotion. For academics, the book traces
a cultural study of rock which is unlike any other discussion of
music or musicology published.
Playing for Change - performing for money and for social justice -
introduces a critical pedagogy of arts-based community learning and
development (A-CLD), a new discipline wherein artists learn to
become educators, social workers, and community economic
development agents. Challenging the assumption that acculturation
into a ruling ideology of state development is necessary, this book
presents a version of CLD that locates development in the
production of subjectivities. The author argues that A-CLD is as
concerned with the autonomous collective and the individual as it
is with establishing community infrastructure. As a result, a
radical new theory is proposed to explain aesthetics within arts
movements, beginning not by normalizing music cultures within
global capitalism, but by identifying the creation of experimental
assemblages as locations of cultural resistance. This book offers a
new vocabulary of cultural production to provide a critical
language for a theory of anti-capitalist subjectivity and for a new
type of cultural worker involved with A-CLD. Drawing from a
four-year study of thirteen music festivals, Playing for Change
forwards A-CLD as a locally situated, joyful, and creative
resistance to the globalizing forces of neoliberalism.
Playing for Change - performing for money and for social justice -
introduces a critical pedagogy of arts-based community learning and
development (A-CLD), a new discipline wherein artists learn to
become educators, social workers, and community economic
development agents. Challenging the assumption that acculturation
into a ruling ideology of state development is necessary, this book
presents a version of CLD that locates development in the
production of subjectivities. The author argues that A-CLD is as
concerned with the autonomous collective and the individual as it
is with establishing community infrastructure. As a result, a
radical new theory is proposed to explain aesthetics within arts
movements, beginning not by normalizing music cultures within
global capitalism, but by identifying the creation of experimental
assemblages as locations of cultural resistance. This book offers a
new vocabulary of cultural production to provide a critical
language for a theory of anti-capitalist subjectivity and for a new
type of cultural worker involved with A-CLD. Drawing from a
four-year study of thirteen music festivals, Playing for Change
forwards A-CLD as a locally situated, joyful, and creative
resistance to the globalizing forces of neoliberalism.
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