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Working in Music on the Semiperiphery Local Cultural Production and Global Capitalism Emília Barna.

De Gruyter Central European University Press Complete eBook-Package 2025 Available online

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JSTOR Books Open Access Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Barna, Emília, author.
Series:
Work and labor: transdisciplinary studies for the 21st century.
Work and Labor - Transdisciplinary Studies for the 21st Century - CEU Press
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Music trade--Social aspects--Hungary.
Music trade.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (236 pages).
Place of Publication:
Amsterdam Central European University Press 2025
Summary:
While music as labor feeds into the capitalist cultural industries, this book proves that in this sector informality greatly permeates and governs power relations and the allocations of resources. The significant level of informal involvement of the household in the creative and reproductive processes is also explored. It is particularly in the semiperipheral context that the relationship between home-based work and paid work is unbalanced: Emília Barna's field data are from Hungary and range from 2018 to 2021. The same context also implies considerable involvement of the state and its subsidies, as well as the important role of gatekeepers' political capital. This book embraces the widest possible range of workers in the music industry. It deals with all music genres from high-flying to commercial and observes various workers in the production chain beyond musicians. Niche segments of the sector, such as YouTube-based commercial hip hop, are given special treatment. Using a variety of empirical research methods, the study examines the trends as workers are pushed towards digital entrepreneurship and platform work, on the one hand, and live performance, on the other. The focus on domestic work and informality offers a feminist analysis of work in music. This approach sheds light on gendered divisions of labor and forms of (self-)exploitation that usually remain invisible. The book proposes a new model of cultural autonomy that takes account of the semiperipheral relationship of music industry workers and institutions to both the market and the state.
Contents:
Illustrations and Tables Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1
CREATIVE AUTONOMY, THE STATE, AND GLOBAL CAPITALISM CHAPTER 2
CREATIVE AUTONOMY IN THE "SYSTEM OF NATIONAL COOPERATION": PROFESSIONALIZATION, INCORPORATION, AND DIGITAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP CHAPTER 3
THE PLATFORMIZATION OF MUSICAL LABOR AND ITS SOCIAL EMBEDDEDNESS: THE CASE OF HIP HOP CHAPTER 4
GENDER RELATIONS AND THE ROLE OF THE HOUSEHOLD IN MUSICAL LABOR CHAPTER 5
EMOTIONAL LABOR IN MUSIC PRODUCTION CHAPTER 6
LABOR, CRISIS, AND SOLIDARITY APPENDICES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
Notes:
"Amsterdam University Press"
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
ISBN:
1-003-72390-X
963-386-847-5
9781003723905
OCLC:
1521915521

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