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E-grāmata: Sun, Sea, and Sound: Music and Tourism in the Circum-Caribbean [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

Edited by , Edited by (Associate Professor of Music, University of Pennsylvania, Barrington, NJ)
  • Formāts: 352 pages, 35 figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199988853
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 352 pages, 35 figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Jun-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199988853
Music and tourism, both integral to the culture and livelihood of the circum-Caribbean region, have until recently been approached from disparate disciplinary perspectives. Scholars who specialize in tourism studies typically focus on issues such as economic policy, sustainability, and political implications; music scholars are more likely to concentrate on questions of identity, authenticity, neo-colonialism, and appropriation. Although the insights generated by these paths of scholarship have long been essential to study of the region, Sun, Sea, and Sound turns its attention to the dynamics and interrelationships between tourism and music throughout the region. Editors Timothy Rommen and Daniel T. Neely bring together a group of leading scholars from the fields of ethnomusicology, anthropology, mobility studies, and history to develop and explore a framework - termed music touristics - that considers music in relation to the wide range of tourist experiences that have developed in the region. Over the course of eleven chapters, the authors delve into an array of issues including the ways in which countries such as Jamaica and Cuba have used music to distinguish themselves within the international tourism industry, the tourism surrounding music festivals in Guadeloupe and New Orleans, the intersections between music and sex tourism in Brazil, and spirituality tourism in Cuba. An indispensable resource for the study of music and tourism in global perspective, Sun, Sea, and Sound is essential reading for scholars and students across disciplines interested in the Caribbean region.
Foreword ix
Kenneth Bilby
Acknowledgments xv
List of Contributors
xvii
Introduction: Music Touristics in the Circum-Caribbean 1(16)
Timothy Rommen
PART I Music, Musicians, and the Mass Tourism Market
1 Modern Mento: The Emergence of Native Music in Jamaica Tourism
17(27)
Daniel T. Neely
2 Selling Cuba by the Sound: Music and Tourism in Cuba in the 1990s
44(29)
Vincenzo A. Verna
PART II Material and Immaterial Patterns of Circulation and Music Touristics
3 Cruising Cultures: Post-War Tourism and the Circulation of Caribbean Musical Performances, Recordings, and Representations
73(28)
Mimi Sheller
4 "Hello, New York City!": Sonic Tourism in Haitian Rara
101(24)
Michael Largey
PART III Sites and Sounds of Intra-regional, Expatriate, and Insider Tourism
5 Wanderers of Love: Touring and Tourism in the Jamaica-Haiti Musical Circuit of the 1950s
125(26)
Matthew J. Smith
6 Outsider, Insider, and Imagined Tourists: Musical and Cultural Tourism in the Dominican Republic
151(28)
Sydney Hutchinson
7 Celebrating Settlement Day in Belize
179(34)
Oliver N. Greene, Jr.
PART IV Festivalizing Music Touristics
8 DestiNation: The Festival Gwoka, Tourism, and Anticolonialism
213(25)
Jerome Carnal
9 "Jockomo Fee Na Nay!": Afro-Caribbean and Afro-Creole Sensorialities and the Festivalization of New Orleans's Musical Tourism
238(29)
Ruthie Meadows
PART V On the Music Touristics of Sex and Spirituality
10 Sound Tracks of a Tropical Sexscape: Tropicalizing Northeastern Brazil, Channeling Transnational Desires
267(22)
Darien Lamen
11 Resorting to Spiritual Tourism: Sacred Spectacle in Afro-Cuban Regla de Ocha
289(17)
Katherine J. Hagedorn
Afterword 306(11)
Jocelyne Guilbault
Index 317
Timothy Rommen received his Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from the University of Chicago in 2002. He specializes in the music of the Caribbean with research interests that include folk and popular sacred music, popular music, critical theory, ethics, diaspora, tourism, and the intellectual history of ethnomusicology. The majority of his research is focused on musics circulating in and around the Anglophone Caribbean.