Query Result Set
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1496Hits:19407107Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

  Hide Options
Sort Order Items / Page
POPULAR ARTS (2) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   127847


Artistic separation versus artistic mixing in European multicul / Martiniello, Marco   Journal Article
Martiniello, Marco Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This introductory article discusses the diversification of diversity in Europe. It then looks at the tension between ethnic separation and ethnic mixing in urban Europe in general terms. The next section elaborates on a similar tension in the field of popular arts. Finally, the article presents the main insights of the contributions to the special issue.
Key Words Ethnicity  Multiculturalism  Europe  Diversity  Cities  Popular Arts 
        Export Export
2
ID:   121832


New wine, old wineskins: authorship and digitalizing Nigerian oral poetry through new media technologies / Tsaaior, James Tar   Journal Article
Tsaaior, James Tar Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Much of Nigerian oral poetry, especially the musical genre, has been increasingly reduced to digital formats through the instrumentality of new media technologies. This transformation has, however, not been sufficiently acknowledged in oral literary researches and discourses. This alternative existence acquired by the oral forms manifests itself in digital technological modes like CDs, VCDs, DVDs, digital radio and television and the internet which assure them of longevity. This paper, therefore, engages Nigerian oral poetry and its inscription in digital processes using new media technologies. In particular, it negotiates the trajectory of transforming primary orality to secondary and tertiary orality through which oral performances like songs have acquired new modes of existence and meanings by way of recordings and digitalization using the new media. Many of these poetic forms have travelled through historical time to the postmodern moment as migrant metaphors and have become stored in digital forms thus making them new wine though preserved in the old wineskins of the poets and new media processes. Using an emergent generation of Nigerian popular poets and musical artistes, the paper problematizes the episteme of authorship. It interrogates the very idea of authorship in the contested and interstitial space of communal and individual authorship in the digital age where the term has undergone radical destabilisation. Who owns the oral forms, for instance? Is it the so-called anonymous composer in traditional society, the collector or recorder who mediates the creative process and becomes a surrogate agent, or the contemporary artist who is heir to this timeless tradition of oral intellection through performances that are digitalized and stored in retrieval systems, or is it a virtual community of authors, or a hybrid of all of these? The paper concludes that digital technologies are a means of preserving these oral forms and endowing them with vitality and enduring relevance to meet the immediacy and urgency of postmodern societal needs in Nigeria.
Key Words Nigeria  Authorship  New Media  Musical Artists  Oral Poetry  Popular Arts 
        Export Export