DJ Culture in the Mix: Power, Technology, and Social Change in Electronic Dance Music
Editat de Professor and Department Chair Bernardo Attias, Fil Dokter and Expert in International Politics Anna Gavanas, Reader in Cultural Studies Hillegonda Rietvelden Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 dec 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781623560065
ISBN-10: 1623560063
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1623560063
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Includes contributions from popular music and dance culture scholars from around the world
Notă biografică
Bernardo Alexander Attias is Professor and Chair of Communication Studies at California State University Northridge, US.Dr Anna Gavanas is Social Anthropologist and Docent at Remeso, Linköping University, Sweden.Dr Hillegonda C. Rietveld is Professor at the School of Arts and Creative Industries at London South Bank University, UK.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsChapter 1: Introduction Hillegonda C. RietveldChapter 2: Subjectivity in the Groove: Phonography, Digitality, and Fidelity Bernardo Alexander AttiasChapter 3: DJ Technologies, Social Networks, and Gendered Trajectories in European DJ Cultures Anna Gavanas and Rosa ReitsamerChapter 4: 'Journey to the Light'? Immersion, Spectacle, and Mediation Hillegonda C. RietveldChapter 5: The DJ as Electronic De-Territorializer Mirko M. Hall and Naida ZukicChapter 6: 'It's Not the Mix, It's the Selection': Music Programming in Contemporary DJ Culture Kai FikentscherChapter 7: Electronic Dance Music and Technological Change: Lessons from Actor-Network Theory - Jonathan YuChapter 8: DJ Culture and the Commercial Club Scene in Sydney Ed MontanoChapter 9: DJs and the Aesthetic of Acceleration in Drum 'n' Bass Chris ChristodoulouChapter 10: The Forging of a White Gay Aesthetic at the Saint, 1980-84 Tim LawrenceChapter 11: DJs as Cultural Mediators: the Mixing Work of São Paulo's Peripheral DJs Ivan Paolo de Paris FontanariChapter 12: War on the Dance Floor: Synthscenen's Military Power Games Johanna PaulssonChapter 13: DJ-Driven Literature: A Linguistic Remix Simon A. Morrison ContributorsIndex
Recenzii
What is enjoyable about the Attias, Gavanas, and Rietveld collection is that it not only draws on perspectives from academics associated with musicology but also includes specialists in social anthropology, cultural studies, communication studies, and media practice. Not only are the local scenes discussed diverse, but the academic perspectives and disciplines represented include multiple views . for this reason, it should be on the radar of scholar's associated with popular music, and certainly those interested in EDM. Selections from this book would also be well-suited for introductory courses in popular music or music technology.
DJ Culture in the Mix offers not only a much broader picture than the standard monolithic account, but a refreshingly different type of picture - a cubist approach, with a dozen viewpoints thrown unpredictably together . . . A timely representation of just how broad the subject is - and should be
A merit of the book consists of its insights into particular scenes, which is in itself a characterising trait of DJ cultures. Valuable field research, historical research and interviews with scene operators and participants spot light on various contexts...Overall, this makes for a kaleidoscopic look at DJ culture.
There are good books on dance clubs and dance music, but this is the first volume on the figure of the dance music DJ and it is most welcome. DJ Culture in the Mix is well-organized, up-to-date and genuinely international, and brings together many of the leading figures in dance music studies. Highly recommended.
Like a good DJ set, DJ Culture in the Mix is an invigorating, well-conceived collection that leaves us both satisfied and eager for more. Many thanks to this excellent group of scholars for a multifaceted exploration of the rich, but little understood world of the electronic dance music DJ.
Exploring everything from the fractious taste politics of New York gay clubland during the post-disco Eighties to the cult of speed in 21st Century drum 'n' bass, DJ Culture In the Mix is a collection of probing, insightful essays that will provide stimulation and enlightenment for dance music scholars and dance music fans alike.
DJ Culture in the Mix fills a long overdue void in DJ and electronic dance music literature. Interdisciplinary in focus and approach, the essays within raise thoughtful questions and offer a range of critical insights into the complexities of DJ cultures and practices around the world.
One of the strongest points of this collection is the attention it pays to issues of gender in relation to DJs, their careers, and their representations in EDM scenes. . Gavanas and Reitsamer refuse to content themselves with merely observing that the DJ profession is male-dominated, instead striving to understand how this has come to be, how it persists, and what efforts are being made to change it. . DJ Culture in the Mix is an original, valuable, and much-needed contribution to the scholarship of DJS and their activities in the EDM scene.
DJ Culture in the Mix offers not only a much broader picture than the standard monolithic account, but a refreshingly different type of picture - a cubist approach, with a dozen viewpoints thrown unpredictably together . . . A timely representation of just how broad the subject is - and should be
A merit of the book consists of its insights into particular scenes, which is in itself a characterising trait of DJ cultures. Valuable field research, historical research and interviews with scene operators and participants spot light on various contexts...Overall, this makes for a kaleidoscopic look at DJ culture.
There are good books on dance clubs and dance music, but this is the first volume on the figure of the dance music DJ and it is most welcome. DJ Culture in the Mix is well-organized, up-to-date and genuinely international, and brings together many of the leading figures in dance music studies. Highly recommended.
Like a good DJ set, DJ Culture in the Mix is an invigorating, well-conceived collection that leaves us both satisfied and eager for more. Many thanks to this excellent group of scholars for a multifaceted exploration of the rich, but little understood world of the electronic dance music DJ.
Exploring everything from the fractious taste politics of New York gay clubland during the post-disco Eighties to the cult of speed in 21st Century drum 'n' bass, DJ Culture In the Mix is a collection of probing, insightful essays that will provide stimulation and enlightenment for dance music scholars and dance music fans alike.
DJ Culture in the Mix fills a long overdue void in DJ and electronic dance music literature. Interdisciplinary in focus and approach, the essays within raise thoughtful questions and offer a range of critical insights into the complexities of DJ cultures and practices around the world.
One of the strongest points of this collection is the attention it pays to issues of gender in relation to DJs, their careers, and their representations in EDM scenes. . Gavanas and Reitsamer refuse to content themselves with merely observing that the DJ profession is male-dominated, instead striving to understand how this has come to be, how it persists, and what efforts are being made to change it. . DJ Culture in the Mix is an original, valuable, and much-needed contribution to the scholarship of DJS and their activities in the EDM scene.