Music as Intangible Cultural Heritage: Policy, Ideology, and Practice in the Preservation of East Asian Traditions

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Professor Keith Howard
Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., Oct 28, 2012 - Music - 292 pages

Focussing on music traditions, these essays explore the policy, ideology and practice of preservation and promotion of East Asian intangible cultural heritage. For the first time, Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan - states that were amongst the first to establish legislation and systems for indigenous traditions - are considered together. Calls to preserve the intangible heritage have recently become louder, not least with increasing UNESCO attention. The imperative to preserve is, throughout the region, cast as a way to counter the perceived loss of cultural diversity caused by globalization, modernization, urbanization and the spread of the mass media. Four chapters - one each on China, Korea, Taiwan and Japan - incorporate a foundational overview of preservation policy and practice of musical intangible cultural heritage at the state level. These chapters are complemented by a set of chapters that explore how the practice of policy has impacted on specific musics, from Confucian ritual through Kam big song to the Okinawan sanshin. Each chapter is based on rich ethnographic data collected through extended fieldwork. The team of international contributors give both insider and outsider perspectives as they both account for, and critique, policy, ideology and practice in East Asian music as intangible cultural heritage.

 

Contents

List ofFigures Tables and Maps
Policy
Eemang gay dor gaey Hey Why Dont You Sing?
Conflicting Agendas in
Preserving the Ritual
NanguanNanyin and
9Dichotomies between Classical and Folk in the Intangible
The Impact ofCultural Policy on the Transmissionof Japanese
11Whose Heritage? Cultural Properties Legislationand Regional Identity in Okinawa
References
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Keith Howard is Professor of Music at the School of Oriental and African Studies, and was formerly Associate Dean, Research, Sydney Conservatorium of Music, University of Sydney, Australia.

Keith Howard, Helen Rees, Catherine Ingram, Olivia Kraef, Lauren Gorfinkel, Roald Maliangkay, Ying-fen Wang, Shino Arisawa, Jane Alaszewska, Matt Gillan.

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