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Popular Culture and Political Identity in the Arab Gulf States

May 2, 2010 by BPELforum

  • ISBN13: 9780863566929
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

The Gulf States are assuming an ever more important role in the global political economy, and new cultural and political identities are emerging, both through natural processes and as a result of state design. This book explores some of the issues raised by this developing profile.

Alanoud Alsharekh is a member of the advisory council of the London Middle East Institute (LMEI) at SOAS and a consultant for the UN Development Fund for Women.

Robert Springborg holds the MBI Al Jaber Chair in Middle East Studies at SOAS and is director of the LMEI.

Sarah Stewart is deputy director of the LMEI and teaches in the Department of the Study of Religions at SOAS.

Popular Culture and Political Identity in the Arab Gulf States

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Advisory Council, Al Jaber, Arab, Arab Gulf States, Culture, Deputy Director, Global Economy, Global Political Economy, Gulf, Identity, London, Mbi, Middle East Institute, Middle East Studies, Natural Processes, Political, Political Identities, Political Identity, Popular, Popular Culture, Product Description, Religions, Remainder Mark, Sarah Stewart, Soas, States

Hindi Film Songs and the Cinema

May 1, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Since their beginnings in the 1930s, Hindi films and film songs have dominated popular culture in South Asia and the diaspora. They have also gained considerable popularity among other audiences in Russia, the Middle East, parts of Africa, and have more recently been making their presence felt in mainstream British and US popular culture. Hindi film songs have been described on the one hand as heavily standardized, and on the other as highly eclectic. Their commercial success is similarly paradoxical.Anna Morcom examines the subject from the perspectives of ethnomusicology, popular music studies, film music studies and South Asian studies. The unique findings of this book illustrate that the primary context of Hindi film songs is not just the culture and society of South Asia, but also the world created by their parent films and Hindi cinema in general. Morcom argues that film song as a musical style and as a commercial and social phenomenon does not make sense unless the cinematic context is taken into account. The relationship of film songs and films is explored at the levels of production, musical style, commercial life and audience reception.

Hindi Film Songs and the Cinema

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: 1930s, Audience Reception, Audiences, Cinema, Commercial Success, Culture And Society, Diaspora, Film, Film Music, Film Song, Hindi, Hindi Film Songs, Mainstream, Morcom, Musical Style, Perspectives, Popular Culture, Popular Music Studies, Popularity, Product Description, Social Phenomenon, Songs, South Asia, South Asian Studies

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