A different set of purposes define culture today than those that
preoccupied the world in the immediate decades of decolonization.
Focusing on art and music in diverse parts of the world, Daniel
Herwitz explores a world that has largely shifted from the earlier
days of nationalism, decolonization and cultural exclusion, to one of
global markets and networks. Using examples from India and Mexico to
South Africa, Australia and China, Herwitz argues that the cultural
politics and art being produced in these places are now post-
postcolonial. Where the postcolonial downplayed formerly Eurocentric
forms and celebrated art with national consciousness, the rules for
21st century cultural authenticity are quickly disappearing. Young
people think of themselves in relation to global culture rather than
nation-¬-building; the project of producing a new and modern art for
the incipient and rising postcolonial nation is out of date. By
examining the shift in which art accesses the past and the rise of
trends such as hitching consumer culture to celebrity forms and
branding, Herwitz's original and engaging exploration of contemporary
art captures the ways in which art has given way to a new form of
production, altering everything from the role of tradition and
heritage in contemporary art to the terms of its vision and
circulation.
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Freeing Luther from the Modern Political Narrative
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781474299695
Publisert
2016
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter