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[ecrea] New Book: Music as Multimodal Discourse: Semiotics, Power and Protest
Tue Dec 20 02:04:15 GMT 2016
Some of you may be interested in our new edited book Music as Multimodal
Discourse: Semiotics, Power and Protest.
The book is an edited collection that sets out what we feel is a
relatively new approach that takes music as just one mode of
communication amongst others such as image and text, and is particularly
relevant today in an increasingly multimedia world. There's some really
good work in there from Lyndon Way, Göran Eriksson and David Machin,
John Richardson, Theo Van Leeuwen, Johnny Wingstedt, Laura
Filardo-Llamas, Aileen Dillane, Martin J. Power and Eoin Devereux, Rusty
Barrett and Matthew Ord.
http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/music-as-multimodal-discourse-9781474264426/
Table of contents
1. Understanding Music as Multimodal Discourse, Simon McKerrell
(Newcastle University, UK) and Lyndon C. S. Way (Izmir University of
Economics, Turkey)
2. The Role of Music in Ridiculing the Working Classes in Reality
Television, Göran Eriksson and David Machin (Örebro University, Sweden)
3. 'Shame Makes the World Go Around': Performed and Embodied (Gendered)
Class Disgust in Morrissey's 'Slum Mums', Aileen Dillane, Martin J.
Power and Eoin Devereux (University of Limerick, Ireland)
4. Recontextualization and Fascist Music, John E. Richardson
(Loughborough University, UK)
5. Authenticity and Subversion: Protest Music Videos' Struggle with
countercultural Politics and Authenticity, Lyndon C. S. Way (Izmir
University of Economics, Turkey)
6. Sonic Logos, Theo van Leeuwen (University of Technology Sydney,
Australia)
7. 'If You Have Nothing To Say – Sing It!': On the Interplay of Music,
Voice and Lyrics in the Advertising Jingle, Johnny Wingstedt (Dalarna
University, Sweden)
8. When the Fairy Tale Is Over: An Analysis of Songs and Institutional
Discourse against Domestic Violence in Spain, Laura Filardo-Llamas
(University of Valladolid, Spain)
9. Indigenous Hip Hop as Anti-colonial Discourse in Guatemala, Rusty
Barrett (University of Kentucky, USA)
10. Song, Sonic Metaphor, and Countercultural Discourse in British
Folk-rock Recordings, Matthew Ord (Newcastle University, UK)
Index
List of Figures
See more at:
http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/music-as-multimodal-discourse-9781474264426/#sthash.kHbeReLc.dpuf
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