Scarecrow Press
Pages: 472
978-0-8108-6677-5 • eBook • October 2007 • $110.75 • (£85.00)
Donna A. Buchanan is associate professor of music at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where she is also the Director of the Russian, East European, and Eurasian Center. She is the author of Performing Democracy: Bulgarian Music and Musicians in Transition (2006).
Chapter 1 Illustrations
Chapter 2 Contents of CD-ROM
Chapter 3 Series Foreword
Chapter 4 Preface and Acknowledgments
Chapter 5 Prelude
Chapter 6 1. Oh, Those Turks! Music, Politics, and Interculturality in the Balkans and Beyond
Chapter 7
Chapter I Post-1989 Culture Industries and Their Nationalist Icons
Chapter 8 2. Bosnian and Serbian Popular Music in the 1990s: Divergent Paths, Conflicting Meanings, and Shared Sentiments
Chapter 9 3.Musica Orientala: Identity and Popular Culture in Postcommumist Romania
Chapter 10 4. BularianChalga on Video: Oriental Stereotypes, Mafia Exoticism, and Politics
Chapter 11 5. Regional Voices in a National Soundscape: Balkan Music and Dance in Greece
Chapter 12
Chapter II Beyond Nation: Regionalisms in a Cosmopolitan Frame
Chapter 13 6. Ottoman Echoes. Byzantine Frescoes, and Musical Instruments in the Balkans
Chapter 14 7. Bulgarian Ethnopop along the OldVia Militaris: Ottomanism, Orientalism, or Balkan Cosmopolitanism?
Chapter 15 8. The Criminals of Albanian Music: Albanian Commercial Folk Music and Issues of Identity since 1990
Chapter 16 9. Shedding Light on the Balkans: Sezen Aksu's Anatolian Pop
Chapter 17 10. Trafficking in the Exotic with Gypsy Music: Balkan Roma, Cosmopolitanism, and World Music Festivals
Chapter 18 Postlude
Chapter 19 11. Balkan Boundaries and How to Cross Them: A Postlude
Chapter 20 References
Chapter 21 Discography
Chapter 22 Filmography and Videography
Chapter 23 Index
Chapter 24 About the Editor and Contributors
The articles included in this book provide valuable insights which show how the Ottoman imperial past continues to exist as a social variable in the Balkans, working within a complex interplay of cultural issues and political contexts. This is an important collection depicting the continuous process of constructing images of the self and the other....
— Huseyin Oylupinar
This book should interest those who want to understand how popular music and culture affect, reflect, register, and satirize ordinary people's experience of political and economic life. The use of the book and its chapters for classroom lectures is greatly facilitated by the accompanying CD....
— Timothy Rice
At the heart of Donna Buchanan's study of Bulgarian ethnopop is a well-documented history of the place of Romani performance practice and aesthetic sensibilities in the development of the much disputed, post-socialist dance/music genre chalga. This volumeoffers a wealth of solid information concerning Balkan history and culture that is viewed through the lens of theoretical constructs such as orientalism, balkanism, and cosmopolitanism. The accompanying figures and tables are extremely useful as is the CD-ROM that offers numerous plates, sound and video recordings...
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This excellent collection compares and contrasts the musical lives of peoples of the Balkans....This is the first volume devoted to the subject and its complexities. A sophisticated work...it is directed largely at scholars but it speaks to numerous disciplines in the arts and the social sciences....Recommended....
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