Popular Music, Cultural Politics and Music Education in China

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A01=Wai-Chung Ho
Art Publishing House
Author_Wai-Chung Ho
Beijing
Beijing Opera
Category=AVLP
Changsha
Children's Publishing House
Children’s Publishing House
China
Chinese Folk Songs
Chinese Government
Chinese Popular Music
Chinese Popular Songs
Communism
Cui Jian
Cultural politics
Education Publishing House
educational policy China
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Globalisation
globalisation in education
Mainland China
music curriculum reform
Music Education
Nationalism
nationalism and identity
Popular Idols
Popular Music
Popular Music Education
popular music pedagogy research
Popular Songs
PRC Government
qualitative case studies
Red Songs
School Music
School Music Curriculum
School Music Education
School Music Lessons
School Music Teachers
Shanghai
Social change
sociopolitical transformation
Super Girl
Tv Drama
Wai-Chung Ho

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367230500
  • Weight: 390g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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While attention has been paid to various aspects of music education in China, to date no single publication has systematically addressed the complex interplay of sociopolitical transformations underlying the development of popular music and music education in the multilevel culture of China. Before the implementation of the new curriculum reforms in China at the beginning of the twenty-first century, there was neither Chinese nor Western popular music in textbook materials. Popular culture had long been prohibited in school music education by China’s strong revolutionary orientation, which feared ‘spiritual pollution’ by Western cultures. However, since the early twenty-first century, education reform has attempted to help students deal with experiences in their daily lives and has officially included learning the canon of popular music in the music curriculum. In relation to this topic, this book analyses how social transformation and cultural politics have affected community relations and the transmission of popular music through school music education. Ho presents music and music education as sociopolitical constructions of nationalism and globalization. Moreover, how popular music is received in national and global contexts and how it affects the construction of social and musical meanings in school music education, as well as the reformation of music education in mainland China, is discussed. Based on the perspectives of school music teachers and students, the findings of the empirical studies in this book address the power and potential use of popular music in school music education as a producer and reproducer of cultural politics in the music curriculum in the mainland.

Wai-Chung Ho is a professor in the Department of Music at Hong Kong Baptist University and is recognized as the leading expert in music education in China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Ho has addressed a broad array of themes in the sociology of music and music education in frequent contributions to leading international research journals in education, music education, and cultural studies, such as the British Journal of Music Education, British Journal of Educational Technology, International Journal of Music Education, Music Education Research, Compare, International Journal of Cultural Studies, Popular Music & Society, and Popular Music. Ho’s first book was School Music Education and Social Change in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan (2011).

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