9780820441399-0820441392-Sound Identities: Popular Music and the Cultural Politics of Education

Sound Identities: Popular Music and the Cultural Politics of Education

ISBN-13: 9780820441399
ISBN-10: 0820441392
Edition: New
Author: Cameron McCarthy, Glenn Hudak, Paula Saukko, Shawn Miklaucic
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Format: Paperback 490 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780820441399
ISBN-10: 0820441392
Edition: New
Author: Cameron McCarthy, Glenn Hudak, Paula Saukko, Shawn Miklaucic
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Format: Paperback 490 pages

Summary

Sound Identities: Popular Music and the Cultural Politics of Education (ISBN-13: 9780820441399 and ISBN-10: 0820441392), written by authors Cameron McCarthy, Glenn Hudak, Paula Saukko, Shawn Miklaucic, was published by Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers in 1999. With an overall rating of 3.9 stars, it's a notable title among other Musical Genres (Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Anthropology, Behavioral Sciences, Schools & Teaching, Music) books. You can easily purchase or rent Sound Identities: Popular Music and the Cultural Politics of Education (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Musical Genres books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.55.

Description

As we enter the twenty-first century, music is playing an ever-increasing pivotal role in the lives of youth as the vehicle of old and new ideas and fantasies and as the site of the work of youthful imagination. But music is also the location of the hegemonic thrusts of the culture industry, the site of the fabrication of new market-susceptible subjectivities, and the site of the production and reproduction of conservative ideas outright. To understand these dynamics we must reach outside the field of education. Sound Identities offers sustained reflection on the sociocultural implications of youth consumption of popular music such as rap, heavy metal, calypso, and salsa. If it can be argued that young people construct their identities through the social formation of boundaries, then it is important to uncover how social, cultural, and political boundaries are created and lived through popular music. This is both a pedagogical and political concern. In Sound Identities, contributors pursue these themes throughout: across the terrains of the American nation; across the global dynamics of postcolonial music history; and ultimately back into the micropolitics of the pedagogy of musical affect in the classroom. Collectively the authors insist that we see music as operating within the context of a plurality of techno, ideo, ethno, finance, and media scapes - flows and logics of globalization that fragment, rework, and reintegrate human experience in the progress of music within the circuits of production, distribution, and consumption (Appadurai, 1996). The eighteen essays in this volume foreground a wide array of theoretical and empirical research that looks at the dynamic role that music plays at the level of the everyday lives of today's school youth. Sound Identities is divided into four sections: «Music in the Nation,» «Music in the Postcolony,» «Music in the Contested Metropolis,» and «The Pedagogy of the Musical Affect.»
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