'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.

Indochina is the home of about a million so-called “Moi” wrote Joseph Buttinger in 1968 and referred to the Vietnamese term for “savages”. Now, this classification is not longer officially appreciated. Nevertheless, the history of minority cultures sharing a huge territory with a strong majority suc...

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Main Author: Jaehnichen, Gisa
Other Authors: Hemetek, Ursula
Format: Book Section
Language:English
Published: Institut für Volksmusikforschung und Ethnomusikologie 2012
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/26313/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
id my.upm.eprints.26313
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spelling my.upm.eprints.263132013-12-24T06:28:50Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/26313/ 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination. Jaehnichen, Gisa Indochina is the home of about a million so-called “Moi” wrote Joseph Buttinger in 1968 and referred to the Vietnamese term for “savages”. Now, this classification is not longer officially appreciated. Nevertheless, the history of minority cultures sharing a huge territory with a strong majority such as the Viet reaches far back into the past. We find marks of cultural exchange in many aspects of Viet performing arts such as song competitions, ritual music, instrumental entertainment, traditional theatre, and also in ‘classical’ vocal and instrumental compositions including their commercially and nationally motivated presentation. Illustrating these cultural contacts and their various appearances rooted in the past centuries with some clear examples from the author’s own long term field researches, the paper will discuss the way of quoting minority cultures, the respective level of individuality, the background of the quoted musical reference, and the level of identification among the bearer of these quoted cultures. Do they feel being respected as group and/or as personalities? Do those quotations change their musical self-presentation? Does knowledge about their inter-related music histories helps to find mutual musical understanding? These and other questions will be discussed. Institut für Volksmusikforschung und Ethnomusikologie Hemetek, Ursula 2012 Book Section PeerReviewed Jaehnichen, Gisa (2012) 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination. In: Music and Minorities in Ethnomusicology: Challenges and Discourses From Three Continents. Institut für Volksmusikforschung und Ethnomusikologie, Vienna, Austria, pp. 13-24. ISBN 9783902153067 English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Indochina is the home of about a million so-called “Moi” wrote Joseph Buttinger in 1968 and referred to the Vietnamese term for “savages”. Now, this classification is not longer officially appreciated. Nevertheless, the history of minority cultures sharing a huge territory with a strong majority such as the Viet reaches far back into the past. We find marks of cultural exchange in many aspects of Viet performing arts such as song competitions, ritual music, instrumental entertainment, traditional theatre, and also in ‘classical’ vocal and instrumental compositions including their commercially and nationally motivated presentation. Illustrating these cultural contacts and their various appearances rooted in the past centuries with some clear examples from the author’s own long term field researches, the paper will discuss the way of quoting minority cultures, the respective level of individuality, the background of the quoted musical reference, and the level of identification among the bearer of these quoted cultures. Do they feel being respected as group and/or as personalities? Do those quotations change their musical self-presentation? Does knowledge about their inter-related music histories helps to find mutual musical understanding? These and other questions will be discussed.
author2 Hemetek, Ursula
author_facet Hemetek, Ursula
Jaehnichen, Gisa
format Book Section
author Jaehnichen, Gisa
spellingShingle Jaehnichen, Gisa
'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
author_sort Jaehnichen, Gisa
title 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
title_short 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
title_full 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
title_fullStr 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
title_full_unstemmed 'Quoting' minorities in Viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
title_sort 'quoting' minorities in viet performing arts - a short history of musical subordination.
publisher Institut für Volksmusikforschung und Ethnomusikologie
publishDate 2012
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/26313/
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