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Barbara Lebrun

    Une et divisible?
    Protest Music in France
    • Protest Music in France

      Production, Identity and Audiences

      • 208 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Exploring the evolution of protest music in France since 1981, the book delves into the contradictions faced by artists who transition from serious political commitment to mainstream success. It examines the dynamics of music production, the representation of protest identity against national identity discourses, and the role of audiences. Additionally, it highlights festivals as venues for negotiating non-mainstream identities, providing a comprehensive view of how protest music interacts with cultural and societal themes in contemporary France.

      Protest Music in France
    • Une et divisible?

      • 250 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      This book offers a selection of the papers presented at the 2008 annual conference of the Association for the Study of Modern and Contemporary France (ASMCF), with chapters focusing on regional formation, European policy, the cultural landscape of Paris, the place of Maghrebi artists in popular music, the evolution of cultural policy regarding ‘popular’ culture, and filmic and novelised representations of desire, ethnicity and nationality. Guided by postcolonial critique, this book takes as its starting point the recognition of multiple identities in modern and contemporary France, despite (and against) the traditional republican emphasis on national unification and the relegation of notions of ethnicity, sexuality and cultural difference to the so-called private sphere. While many publications have engaged with this topic, few juxtapose social and political issues with cultural approaches. This edited volume, by contrast, incorporates the work of specialists drawn from a broad range of academic disciplinary areas, including history, politics, literature and cultural studies, and shows how perceptions of the self and of the other as French have changed over the years, with an emphasis on the contemporary period (post-1945).

      Une et divisible?