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Popular Music Ethnographies: Practice, Place and Identity: BCMCR New Directions in Media and Cultural Research

Editat de Sarah Raine, Shane Blackman, Robert McPherson, Iain A. Taylor
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 ian 2025
An ethnographic approach to global pop music studies.

This edited collection offers evocative ways into an international selection of popular music, from the Ecuadorian indie scene to Chinese rock. In exploring the experiences of musicians, fans, industry professionals, and academics, the rich complexity of popular music is brought to life through ethnography as an immersive approach to both undertaking and communicating research.

Experimenting with ethnography through the joys and tribulations of musical production, fandom, and scholarship, the contributors critically consider what it means to be a popular music ethnographer and what it means to take an ethnographic approach to studying popular music.

In addition to the critical essays, shorter vignettes are provided by musicians, venue owners, music writers, live music photographers, and fans. Altogether, the book explores the practices, places, and identities behind the music.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781835950579
ISBN-10: 1835950574
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 170 x 244 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Intellect Ltd
Colecția Intellect Ltd
Seria BCMCR New Directions in Media and Cultural Research


Notă biografică

Sarah Raine is a Science Foundation Ireland-Irish Research Council Pathway Fellow at University College Dublin, Ireland. Shane Blackman is professor of cultural studies at Canterbury Christ Church University, a research fellow of the Danish National Centre for Social Research, and a research associate in the sociology department of Goldsmiths, University of London. Robert McPherson is a senior lecturer in media and communications at Canterbury Christ Church University. Iain A. Taylor is a senior lecturer in music and program leader of BA (Hons) commercial music at the University of the West of Scotland.

Cuprins

Foreword –Afterword: Ethnographic waves 
Will Straw 
Introduction –Popular Music and Ethnography: An introduction to studies, from musicology to ethnomusicology and beyond
Shane Blackman, Robert McPherson, Sarah Raine and Iain A. Taylor
 
Part I: Practice
Vignette 1. From the Subs Desk
Frances Morgan 
Chapter 1.Raving Potentialities: Navigating Queer Fields in Post-Austerity Lisbon
Jasemin Anika Khaleli 
Chapter 2. Conviviality and Collaboration: The intimacies of ethnographic practice and popular music production between Tanzania and the United Kingdom
David Kerr and Hashim Rubanza
Chapter 3. Developing Digital Intimacies: Examples from lockdown Ireland of a sustainable and hopeful popular music ethnography
Sarah Raine and Aileen Dillane 
Chapter 4. Cineworlding PolyMUSICamory: Cinematic Research-Creation’s Speculative Worldings
Michael B. MacDonald 
Chapter 5. A Two-Way Street! Reflections on Supervising Ethnographic Popular Music Ph.D. Projects
Andy Bennett 
Vignette 2. Fight, Flight or Freeze: A Full Circle Breakthrough in Improvisation
Diljeet Kaur Bhachu 
 
Part II: Place
Vignette 3. Putting the Work in: Finding a Community within the DIY Music Industries
Rebecca Wallace 
Chapter 6. Breaking in Tokyo: Socially Constructed ‘Sacred Places’ for Hip Hop Dance
Jason Ng 
Chapter 7. Queering Carnival: Soca and Safe Spaces in Jamaica
Erin MacLeod with research assistance from J-Flag 
Chapter 8. ‘I Need More of You’: Popular Music, Public Space and Political Mobilization
Kai Ginkel 
Chapter 9. Notes on Studying Ecuadorian Independent Music: Endogenous Ethnography as Counter-Colonial Practice and the Politics of Affect
Juan Pablo Viteri 
Chapter 10. Carving Out Our Own Spaces: Accessing Chinese Rock Music Scenes through a Multi-method Ethnographic Approach
Mengyao Jiang 
Vignette 4. One Man, One Vision, Two Iconic Black Country Venues: Keepin’ Music Live
Mike Hamblett 
 
Part III: Identity
Vignette 5. In Conversation with Michelle Grace Hunder 
Chapter 11. Dynamic Reggae/Dancehall Bodies: An Ethnography into the Dance of Identity and Visibility
‘H’ Patten 
Chapter 12. ‘Chaperone Ethnography’ within Popular Music Studies in Algeria: Fieldwork Explorations of the MA-GNI-FICENT Show of Belles Nuits de Tigzirt
Radia Kasdi 
Chapter 13. Rebels in Society? Ethnographic Moments of ‘Street Politics’ and Organic Intellectuals in the Historical and Contemporary UK Oi! Punk Scene
Nathan Kerrigan and Aidan O’Sullivan 
Chapter 14. Policing Popular Music – ‘Therapy in the Trap’: An Online Eethnography of UK Drill and Grime Artists, Producers and Listeners
Isobel Ingram and Shane Blackman
Chapter 15. ‘But Anyway … You Know How It Is, How Things Go’: The Value of Group Interpretation in Understanding Researcher Positionality during Insider Research
Eva Krisper 
Chapter 16. Scattered Diaries: Biographical Dialogues on the Ethnographic Imagination, Friendship and Popular Music Research
Asya Draganova and Shane Blackman
Vignette 6. ‘Latching Onto Music’: A Personal Journey through UK Subculture 
Grant Sullivan 
Concluding Thoughts – Ethnography as a Basis to Study Popular Music: From Obvious Statements to Original Endeavors
Marie Buscatto 
Notes on Contributors