Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China
Looking back over the past nearly 70 years since the People’s Republic of China was established, it seems that the meaning of ‘place’ has varied and changed, especially since the turn of the millennium. ‘Place’ usually refers to a specific geographical area, but it can also reference an ima...
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Logos Verlag Berlin
2020-12-01
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Series: | Asian-European Music Research Journal |
Online Access: | https://www.logos-verlag.de/cgi-bin/engpapermid?doi=10.30819/aemr.6-6&lng=deu&id= |
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doaj-38fce4ba7ce94018b7c507159f0a7f882021-03-25T11:54:28ZengLogos Verlag BerlinAsian-European Music Research Journal2701-26892625-378X2020-12-016819210.30819/aemr.6-6Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China[宁颖], Ning Ying Looking back over the past nearly 70 years since the People’s Republic of China was established, it seems that the meaning of ‘place’ has varied and changed, especially since the turn of the millennium. ‘Place’ usually refers to a specific geographical area, but it can also reference an imagined space – that is, a sense of place is assembled through experience, feeling, perception and identification. To date, Chinese scholars have paid more attention to the close relationship between traditional music and its locale, or the place in which its original owners resided, but there has been little research that moves beyond a geographical conceptualization. However, the dimensions of place in China are more complex when we consider ethnic minorities rather than the majority Han Chinese: minority musicians represent themselves through their music, while the central government emphasizes the integration of diverse cultures within the Chinese nation. Representations of place, and how these relate to music, therefore differ. This chapter examines, using Feld’s and Basso’s (1996) term, what the ‘sense of place’ is for minority musicians, and how within contemporary China musicians and the state have developed different ‘senses of place’. https://www.logos-verlag.de/cgi-bin/engpapermid?doi=10.30819/aemr.6-6&lng=deu&id= |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
[宁颖], Ning Ying |
spellingShingle |
[宁颖], Ning Ying Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China Asian-European Music Research Journal |
author_facet |
[宁颖], Ning Ying |
author_sort |
[宁颖], Ning Ying |
title |
Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China |
title_short |
Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China |
title_full |
Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China |
title_fullStr |
Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China |
title_full_unstemmed |
Developing a Sense of Place through Minorities' Traditional Music in Contemporary China |
title_sort |
developing a sense of place through minorities' traditional music in contemporary china |
publisher |
Logos Verlag Berlin |
series |
Asian-European Music Research Journal |
issn |
2701-2689 2625-378X |
publishDate |
2020-12-01 |
description |
Looking back over the past nearly 70 years since the People’s Republic of China was established, it seems that the meaning of ‘place’ has varied and changed, especially since the turn of the millennium. ‘Place’ usually refers to a specific geographical area, but it can also reference an imagined space – that is, a sense of place is assembled through experience, feeling, perception and identification. To date, Chinese scholars have paid more attention to the close relationship between traditional music and its locale, or the place in which its original owners resided, but there has been little research that moves beyond a geographical conceptualization. However, the dimensions of place in China are more complex when we consider ethnic minorities rather than the majority Han Chinese: minority musicians represent themselves through their music, while the central government emphasizes the integration of diverse cultures within the Chinese nation. Representations of place, and how these relate to music, therefore differ. This chapter examines, using Feld’s and Basso’s (1996) term, what the ‘sense of place’ is for minority musicians, and how within contemporary China musicians and the state have developed different ‘senses of place’.
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url |
https://www.logos-verlag.de/cgi-bin/engpapermid?doi=10.30819/aemr.6-6&lng=deu&id= |
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AT níngyǐngningying developingasenseofplacethroughminoritiestraditionalmusicincontemporarychina |
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