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Titre Relocating the Functions of Chineseness in Chinese Popular Music after the China Wind
Auteur Chen-yu Lin
Mir@bel Revue China perspectives
Numéro no 2020/2 Sinophone Musical Worlds (2): The Politics of Chineseness
Rubrique / Thématique
Special feature
Page 7-14
Résumé anglais While the popularity of China Wind (zhongguofeng 中國風) music during the 2000s has waned somewhat since its peak, the notion of Chineseness in popular music requires reconfiguration. In the world of popular music, transnational flows of culture, migration, and capital have created various forms of Chineseness with different functions. This article examines two ways in which the perception of Chineseness functions in the music industry, namely as a re-centred Chineseness in the creative industries, and Chineseness as a globalising project, by examining the internationally franchised televised music contest The Voice of China and the recent work of two artists known for their China Wind songs, Jay Chou and Wang Leehom. Through textual analysis of media content and songs, as well interviews with industry practitioners, this article argues that Chineseness in today's Chinese popular music is often shaped by markets, industrial practices, media censorship, state policy, and cross-industry convergence, and musicians' artistry increasingly plays a part in forming and authorising the representation of Chineseness in contemporary Chinese popular music.
Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals)
Article en ligne http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/10068