In this book, John Hutnyk questions the meaning of cultural hybridity.
Using the growing popularity of Asian culture in the West as a case
study, he looks at just who benefits from this intermingling of culture.
Focusing on music, race and politics, Hutnyk offers a cogently theorised
critique of the culture industry. He looks at artists such as Asian Dub
Foundation, FunDaMental and Apache Indian to see how their music is
both produced and received. He analyses 'world' music festivals, racist
policing and the power of corporate pop stars to market exotica across
the globe. Throughout, Hutnyk provides a searing critique of a world
that sells exotica as race relations and visibility as redress.
This file is intended only for preview!
I ask you to delete the file from your hard drive after reading it.
thank for the original uploader


No comments:
Post a Comment