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Informationen zum Autor Timothy D. Taylor Klappentext "A bold and wide-ranging study, from a musical angle, of 'the West and the rest.' Timothy D. Taylor mingles insights from musicology, cultural and social history, and cultural theory to demonstrate the changing ways in which various streams of musical life, in Europe and America, have responded to the wider world. Rameau, Mozart, Ives, and Ravel here stand cheek by jowl with Bill Laswell, "bhangra," Hawaiian cowboy music, and TV ads, challenging--and reinvigorating--such easy labels as 'exotic' and 'multicultural.'"--Ralph P. Locke, Professor of Musicology, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester Zusammenfassung Considers how western cultures' understandings of racial! ethnic! and cultural difference have been reflected in music from seventeenth-century operas to the scores of late-twentieth-century television advertisements! arguing that the commonly used term "exoticism" glosses over such differences in many studies of western music. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Music Examples ix List of Figures and Tables xi Acknowledgments xiii Introduction: Beyond Exoticism 1 Part I: Colonialism and Imperialism 15 1. Colonialism, Modernity, and Music: Preliminary Notes on the Rise of Tonality and Opera 17 2. Peopling the Stage: Opera, Otherness, and New Musical Representations in the Enlightenment 43 3. The Rise of Imperialism and New Forms of Representation 73 Part II: Globalization 111 Introduction to Part II / Globalization as a Cultural System 113 4. Consumption, Globalization, and Music in the 1980s and After 123 5. Some Versions of Difference: Discourses of Hybridity in Transnational Musics 140 6. You Can Take “Country” out of the Country, but It Will Never Be “World” 161 7. World Music in Television Ads 184 Conclusions: Selves/Others, History, and Culture 209 Notes 213 Bibliography 261 Indez 291...