Front cover image for The Oxford handbook of popular music in the Nordic countries

The Oxford handbook of popular music in the Nordic countries

Popular music plays a significant role in the evolving global dynamics of the Nordic countries and the fascination with the region's natural environments. As the first of its kind, The Oxford Handbook of Popular Music in the Nordic Countries offers a series of exemplary studies of music in these transnational dynamics by the world's foremost experts in the field.
Print Book, English, 2017
Oxford University Press, New York, NY, United States of America, 2017
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xvii, 411 Seiten : Illustrationen
9780190603908, 0190603909
1004900504
ContentsFiguresTablesAcknowledgementsIntroduction: Music in a Globalizing RegionFabian HoltPART ONEGeography1 Musical Borealism: Nordic Music and European HistoryPhilip V. Bohlman2 Nordic Modernity and the Structure of the Musical LandscapeFabian Holt3 Inclusive Popular Music Education?Alexis A. Kallio and Lauri Väkevä4 Roots, Routes, and Cosmopolitanism: David Lindley Meets Harding HankHans Weisethaunet5 From the Faroes to the World StageJoshua Green6 Christian Metal and the Translocal NorthHenna Jousmäki7 Music and Landscape in IcelandTony Mitchell8 Music and Environmentalism in IcelandNicola DibbenPART TWOHistory9 A Metahistorical Enquiry into Nordic Popular Music HistoriographyAntti-Ville Kärjä10 Echoes of the Colonial Past in Discourse on North Atlantic Popular MusicKimberly Cannady11 Swedish Prog Rock and the Search for a Timeless UtopiaSverker Hyltén-Cavallius and Lars Kaijser12 Trajectories of Karelian Music After the Cold WarPekka Suutari13 The Memorial Ceremony after the 2011 Utøya MassacreJan Sverre Knudsen14 Aspirations and Global Futures: Lessons from Sámi Popular Music for the 21st CenturyTina K. RamnarinePART THREEIdentity15 Masculinity, Race and Transculturalism in a Norwegian ContextStan Hawkins16 Hip Hop as Public PedagogyAlexandra D'Urso17 Urban Music and the Complex Identities of "New Nationals" in ScandinaviaHenrik Marstal18 Rap, Reggae, and White MinoritizationBenjamin R. Teitelbaum19 Sámi Festivals and IndigeneityThomas R. Hilder20 Digitally Mediated Identity in the Cases of Two Sámi ArtistsAnn WernerContributorsIndex