Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
View the Table of Contents. aA veritable feast of the field's most scrumptious offerings,
"East Main Street" satisfies with some of the best minds in Asian
American studies at this table.a "Sure to spark the imagination of both seasoned fans of Asian
American popular culture and the as yet uninitiated. From
cyberspace and animA(c) to "The Simpsons" and "Secret Asian Man,"
this book intrigues and provokes with every chapter. The sheer
number of savvy cultural critics assembled ensures that readers
will find something of interest, no matter where one begins
exploring the popular culture of Asian America." aEast Main Street creates its own relevance by touching on an
abundance of cultural mediums and themes. Scholars of film,
literature, the Internet, music, and history can all find essays in
which to sink their teeth.a aThis volume explores historical and contemporary Asian American
popular culture in the context of three broad themes: globalization
and local identities, cultural legacy and memories, and ethnicity
and identification. Among topics covered are transnational
Vietnamese music, Asian fusion cuisine, race on the Internet, kung
fu movies, hip hop, and the aiconography of Tiger Woodsa. From henna tattoo kits available at your local mall to afaux Asiana fashions, housewares and fusion cuisine; from the new visibility of Asian film, music, video games and anime to the current popularity of martial arts motifs in hip hop, Asianinfluences have thoroughly saturated the U.S. cultural landscape and have now become an integral part of the vernacular of popular culture. By tracing cross-cultural influences and global cultural trends, the essays in East Main Street bring Asian American studies, in all its interdisciplinary richness, to bear on a broad spectrum of cultural artifacts. Contributors consider topics ranging from early Asian American movie stars to the influences of South Asian iconography on rave culture, and from the marketing of Asian culture through food to the contemporary clamor for transnational Chinese womenas historical fiction. East Main Street hits the shelves in the midst of a boom in Asian American population and cultural production. This book is essential not only for understanding Asian American popular culture but also contemporary U.S. popular culture writ large.
A toolkit for understanding how Asian Americans influence, consume and are reflected by mainstream media. Asian Americans have long been the subject and object of popular culture in the U.S. The rapid circulation of cultural flashpoints-such as the American obsession with K-pop sensations, Bollywood dance moves, and sriracha hot sauce-have opened up new ways of understanding how the categories of "Asian" and "Asian American" are counterbalanced within global popular culture. Located at the crossroads of these global and national expressions, Global Asian American Popular Cultures highlights new approaches to modern culture, with essays that explore everything from music, film, and television to comics, fashion, food, and sports. As new digital technologies and cross-media convergence have expanded exchanges of transnational culture, Asian American popular culture emerges as a crucial site for understanding how communities share information and how the meanings of mainstream culture shift with technologies and newly mobile sensibilities. Asian American popular culture is also at the crux of global and national trends in media studies, collapsing boundaries and acting as a lens to view the ebbs and flows of transnational influences on global and American cultures. Offering new and critical analyses of popular cultures that account for emerging textual fields, global producers, technologies of distribution, and trans-medial circulation, this ground-breaking collectionexplores the mainstream and the margins of popular culture.
A toolkit for understanding how Asian Americans influence, consume and are reflected by mainstream media. Asian Americans have long been the subject and object of popular culture in the U.S. The rapid circulation of cultural flashpoints-such as the American obsession with K-pop sensations, Bollywood dance moves, and sriracha hot sauce-have opened up new ways of understanding how the categories of "Asian" and "Asian American" are counterbalanced within global popular culture. Located at the crossroads of these global and national expressions, Global Asian American Popular Cultures highlights new approaches to modern culture, with essays that explore everything from music, film, and television to comics, fashion, food, and sports. As new digital technologies and cross-media convergence have expanded exchanges of transnational culture, Asian American popular culture emerges as a crucial site for understanding how communities share information and how the meanings of mainstream culture shift with technologies and newly mobile sensibilities. Asian American popular culture is also at the crux of global and national trends in media studies, collapsing boundaries and acting as a lens to view the ebbs and flows of transnational influences on global and American cultures. Offering new and critical analyses of popular cultures that account for emerging textual fields, global producers, technologies of distribution, and trans-medial circulation, this ground-breaking collectionexplores the mainstream and the margins of popular culture.
View the Table of Contents. aA veritable feast of the field's most scrumptious offerings,
"East Main Street" satisfies with some of the best minds in Asian
American studies at this table.a "Sure to spark the imagination of both seasoned fans of Asian
American popular culture and the as yet uninitiated. From
cyberspace and animA(c) to "The Simpsons" and "Secret Asian Man,"
this book intrigues and provokes with every chapter. The sheer
number of savvy cultural critics assembled ensures that readers
will find something of interest, no matter where one begins
exploring the popular culture of Asian America." aEast Main Street creates its own relevance by touching on an
abundance of cultural mediums and themes. Scholars of film,
literature, the Internet, music, and history can all find essays in
which to sink their teeth.a aThis volume explores historical and contemporary Asian American
popular culture in the context of three broad themes: globalization
and local identities, cultural legacy and memories, and ethnicity
and identification. Among topics covered are transnational
Vietnamese music, Asian fusion cuisine, race on the Internet, kung
fu movies, hip hop, and the aiconography of Tiger Woodsa. From henna tattoo kits available at your local mall to afaux Asiana fashions, housewares and fusion cuisine; from the new visibility of Asian film, music, video games and anime to the current popularity of martial arts motifs in hip hop, Asianinfluences have thoroughly saturated the U.S. cultural landscape and have now become an integral part of the vernacular of popular culture. By tracing cross-cultural influences and global cultural trends, the essays in East Main Street bring Asian American studies, in all its interdisciplinary richness, to bear on a broad spectrum of cultural artifacts. Contributors consider topics ranging from early Asian American movie stars to the influences of South Asian iconography on rave culture, and from the marketing of Asian culture through food to the contemporary clamor for transnational Chinese womenas historical fiction. East Main Street hits the shelves in the midst of a boom in Asian American population and cultural production. This book is essential not only for understanding Asian American popular culture but also contemporary U.S. popular culture writ large.
|
You may like...
|