Resounding Taiwan

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Amis Music Festival
asian sound culture
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Chinese Communist Party
Chinese Cultural Renaissance Movement
Chinese Orchestra
colonial music history
Colonial Taiwan
cultural identity music
diversity
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ethnomusicology
ethnomusicology Taiwan
Garbage Truck
Golden Triangle
Hakka Christians
Hakka Languages
Hakka People
Ich
Indigenous Music
Indigenous soundscapes
listening
Maiden's Prayer
Maiden’s Prayer
mandopop
music
musicology
Noise Control Regulations
orchestra
performance
Poietic Processes
popular music
PRC Market
Record Collectors
ritual performance studies
Roc
sound
soundscape anthropology
Taiwan
Taiwan's Environmental Protection Administration
Taiwanese Indigenous People
Taiwanese music social transformation
Taiwanese Musical
Taiwanese Opera
Taiwan’s Environmental Protection Administration
Temple Festivals
Young Men
Zhang Fuxing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367473990
  • Weight: 546g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book vibrantly demonstrates how the study of music allows for identification and interpretation of the forces that form Taiwanese society, from politics and policy to reactions to and assertions of such policies.

Contributors to this edited volume explore how music shapes life — and life shapes music — in Taiwan, focusing on subjects ranging from musical life under Japanese colonial rule (1895–1945) through to the contemporary creations of Indigenous musicians, popular music performance and production, Christian religious music, traditional ritual music and theatre, conceptions about sound and noise, and garbage truck music's role in reducing household waste. The volume’s twelve chapters present diverse approaches to their sounding subjects, some deeply rooted in the methods and concerns explored by Taiwan's first generation of ethnomusicologists. Others employ current social theories.

Presenting a window into the cultural lives of the residents of this multicultural, politically contested island, Resounding Taiwan will appeal to students and scholars of musicology and ethnomusicology, anthropology and Asian studies more widely.

Nancy Guy is a Professor of Music at the University of California, San Diego. Her first book, Peking Opera and Politics in Taiwan won the ASCAP Béla Bartók Award for Excellence in Ethnomusicology. Her second book, The Magic of Beverly Sills was named a "Highly Recommended Academic Title" by Choice. Guy's article, "Flowing down Taiwan's Tamsui River: Towards an Ecomusicology of the Environmental Imagination," (2009) is a foundational text in ecomusicology and was awarded the Rulan Chao Pian Publication Prize.