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In the balance : indigeneity, performance, globalization / edited by Helen Gilbert, J.D. Phillipson, Michelle H. Raheja.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
H. Raheja, Michelle, Editor.
Contributor:
J. Phillipson, D., Editor.
Gilbert, Helen, Editor.
H. Raheja, Michelle
J. Phillipson, D.
Gilbert, Helen
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Indigenous peoples--Social life and customs.
Indigenous peoples.
Indigenous peoples--Politics and government.
Performance art--Political aspects.
Performance art.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (vi, 310 pages) : illustrations (black & white); digital, PDF file(s).
Place of Publication:
Liverpool Liverpool University Press 2017
Liverpool, England : Liverpool University Press, 2017.
Language Note:
English
System Details:
text file PDF
Summary:
Indigenous arts, simultaneously attuned to local voices and global cultural flows, have often been the vanguard in communicating what is at stake in the interactions, contradictions, disjunctions, opportunities, exclusions, injustices and aspirations that globalization entails. Focusing specifically on embodied arts and activism, this interdisciplinary volume offers vital new perspectives on the power and precariousness of indigeneity as a politicized cultural force in our unevenly connected world. Twenty-three distinct voices speak to the growing visibility of indigenous peoples’ performance on a global scale over recent decades, drawing specific examples from the Americas, Australia, the Pacific, Scandinavia and South Africa. An ethical touchstone in some arenas and a thorny complication in others, indigeneity is now belatedly recognised as mattering in global debates about natural resources, heritage, governance, belonging and social justice, to name just some of the contentious issues that continue to stall the unfinished business of decolonization. To explore this critical terrain, the essays and images gathered here range in subject from independent film, musical production, endurance art and the performative turn in exhibition and repatriation practices to the appropriation of hip-hop, karaoke and reality TV. Collectively, they urge a fresh look at mechanisms of postcolonial entanglement in the early 21st century as well as the particular rights and insights afforded by indigeneity in that process.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
CC BY-NC
ISBN:
9781786940803
1786940809
OCLC:
1030820959
Publisher Number:
10.3828/9781786940803

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