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The "Amen" Breakbeat as Fratriarchal Totem

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posted on 2024-11-16, 00:54 authored by Andrew WhelanAndrew Whelan
It is generally accepted that music signifies'. "that it can sound happy, sad, sexy, funky, silly, 'American,' religious, or whatever" (McClary 20- 21). Notably, music is engendered; it is read as signifying specific embodied subjectivities, and also hails an audience it constitutes as so positioned: it "inscribes subject positions" (Irving 107). Thus rock music in the West is invariably considered a "male culture comprising male activities and styles" (Cohen l7). Musical genres and gestures, however, a.re not inherently "male" or "female"; they are produced as such, or more precisely, coproduced (Lohan and Faulkner 322). Music is a key resource in the constitutive performance of gender, and vice versa.

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Citation

Whelan, A. M. (2009). The "Amen" Breakbeat as Fratriarchal Totem. In B. Neumeier (Eds.), Dichotonies. Gender and Music (pp. 111-133). Heidelberg: Universitatsverlag Winter.

Pagination

111-133

Language

English

Notes

ISBN: 9783825357016

RIS ID

32738

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