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Greek Rebetiko From A Psychocultural Perspective Same Songs Changing Minds Daniel Koglin Professor Keith Howard

  • SKU: BELL-51982904
Greek Rebetiko From A Psychocultural Perspective Same Songs Changing Minds Daniel Koglin Professor Keith Howard
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Greek Rebetiko From A Psychocultural Perspective Same Songs Changing Minds Daniel Koglin Professor Keith Howard instant download after payment.

Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 12.57 MB
Pages: 318
Author: Daniel Koglin; Professor Keith Howard
ISBN: 9781472465733, 1472465733
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

Greek Rebetiko From A Psychocultural Perspective Same Songs Changing Minds Daniel Koglin Professor Keith Howard by Daniel Koglin; Professor Keith Howard 9781472465733, 1472465733 instant download after payment.

Greek Rebetiko from a Psychocultural Perspective: Same Songs Changing Minds examines the ways in which audiences in present-day Greece and Turkey perceive and use the Greek popular song genre rebetiko to cultivate specific cultural habits and identities. In the past, rebetiko has been associated chiefly with the lower strata of Greek society. But Daniel Koglin approaches the subject from a different perspective, exploring the mythological and ritual aspects of rebetiko, which intellectual elites on both sides of the Aegean Sea have adapted to their own world views in our age of globalized consumption. Combining qualitative and quantitative methods from ethnomusicology, ritual studies, conceptual history and music psychology, Koglin casts light on the role played by national perceptions in the processes of music production and consumption. His analysis reveals that rebetiko persistently oscillates between conceptual categories: it is a music both ours and theirs, marginal and mainstream, joyful and grievous, sacred and profane. The study culminates in the thesis that this semantic multistability is not only a key concept to understanding the ongoing popularity of rebetiko in Greece, and its recent renaissance in Turkey, but also a fundamental aspect of the human experience on the south-eastern borders of Europe.

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