in Search of A Voice

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A01=Casey M.K. Lum
Asian American studies
Author_Casey M.K. Lum
cantonese
Category=JBCC
Category=JHM
Chinese American Experience
Chinese American Immigrant
Chinese Immigrants
Chinese Language Media
communities
cultural identity formation
Dancing Gala
diaspora studies
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic methodology
experience
Experience Karaoke
Hawaiian Wedding Song
hong
immigrant community cultural practices
interpretive
Interpretive Community
John's Community
karaoke
Karaoke Clubs
Karaoke Event
Karaoke Machine
Karaoke Music
Karaoke Rooms
Karaoke Scene
Karaoke Singing
Karaoke System
kong
La La
La La La
Mandarin Song
media audience theory
Mid-Autumn Festival
opera
scene
Silent Participants
sing!
social performance analysis
Taiwanese Immigrants
Television Remote Control Device
York's Chinatown
York’s Chinatown

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805819120
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originating in Japan early in the 1970s as a simple sing-along technology, karaoke has become a hybrid media form designed to integrate mass-mediated popular music, video images, computer graphics, and the live musical performance of its human users. Not only has karaoke become a multimillion-dollar entertainment industry, its varied uses have also evolved into diverse popular cultural and social practices among many people around the world. Based on a two-year ethnographic study, this book offers a penetrating analysis of how karaoke is used in the expression, maintenance, and (re)construction of social identity as part of the Chinese American experience. It also explores the theoretical implications of interaction between the media audience and karaoke as both an electronic communication technology and a cultural practice.

This book analyzes the social origins of karaoke and the dramaturgical characteristics of karaoke events, and explains how various musical genres are reframed as karaoke music. It also visits the numerous karaoke scenes in their natural context -- the sites of the actual consumption of media products, such as expensive private homes and fancy hotel ballrooms in the affluent suburbs of New Jersey, working-class restaurants and nightclubs in the multiethnic neighborhoods in Flushing, Queens, and Cantonese opera music clubs in New York's Chinatown. Finally, the book offers an intimate analysis of how karaoke has been adopted by several interpretive communities of first-generation Chinese immigrants not only as popular entertainment but also as a means to help (re)define their social identity and way of life.

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