Mediterranean Musicscapes in Contemporary Spain: From Mosaic to Net
By (Author) Professor Kiko Mora
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
3rd October 2024
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Other global and regional music styles
Migration, immigration and emigration
Political ideologies and movements
780.946
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This volume focuses on the musicscapes that contest, critique, and rethink Mediterraneidad (Mediterraneaness) in Contemporary Spain, and understands it as a fluid and elusive sociological, cultural, and artistic category. In its traditional formulation, Mediterraneidad concerns the mythical image of Mediterranean harmony represented by the metaphor of the mosaic. The volume argues that since the 1990s we have witnessed a shift in which the mosaic has been superseded by the net: a figure that represents the linking of urban nodes and trans governmental networks, migratory movements, and cultural fluidity. Further, this book assesses how Mediterraneidad became, within the realm of music, the site and sign of a diverse array of social issues such as the formulation of Catalan, Valencian, Andalusian, and Mallorcan national identities, with the 2017 Catalan Independence process taking center stage. Using diverse methodologiesdata-driven sociological approaches; ethnographic and anthropological tools; feminist and gender theoriesthe authors also address the rapidly changing social landscape that started in the 1980s due to global migrations as well as the dismantling of traditional gender dynamics.
Kiko Mora is Professor of Semiotics of Advertising and Consumption, and Culture Industries in the Department of Communication and Social Psychology at the University of Alicante, Spain. He also teaches flamenco and popular music at the University of Crdoba, Spain. He is co-editor of Rock around Spain. Historia, industria, escenas y medios de comunicacin (2013) and author of De cera y goma laca. La produccin de msica espaola en la industria fonogrfica estadounidense: 1894-1914 (2018).