Entertainment Books:

CINÉMA&CIE, INTERNATIONAL FILM STUDIES JOURNAL, VOL. XIX, no. 31, FALL 2018

To Each Their Own Pop. The Mediatization of Popular Music in Europe (1960-1979)
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Description

Pop music meets the media... This issue is dedicated to a social and cultural phenomenon that we could call the ‘mediatization of pop music’. With a particular focus on the 1960s and 1970s, it is our contention that these two decades significantly shaped our current mediatized culture both in its form and content. Since then, instead of political or confessional organisations, it was popular media and music that offered the contact point between public and private spheres, between the personal and the political, and this shift should be reconsidered as a focal trope in modern culture. We hope to widen the notion of mediatization by highlighting a range of historical processes that have had phenomenological after-effects: the experiential prototypes that were developed during this pivotal period later became persistent paradigms, and paved the way for the mediatized world we still live in.

Author Biography:

Alessandro Bratus received his PhD in Musicology in 2009 from the University of Pavia, where he is currently a Senior Lecturer in popular music. He received research grants from the European Network for Musicological Research (London), Fondazione Cariplo (post-doc training in DH) and Pavia/Boston Exchange Program (Tufts University). His teaching and research activities focus on analytical approaches to music and audiovisual media in Anglo-American and Italian popular culture since the 1960s. Massimo Locatelli, Associate Professor, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan. Founding member of NECS, the European Network for Cinema and Media Studies, he serves on the editorial boards of CS/Comunicazioni Sociali. Journal of Media, Performing Arts and Cultural Studies and Cinéma&Cie. His main research areas are the history of film theory and the social and technological history of Italian cinema. Among his publications, Cinema e sonoro in Italia (1945-1970) (special issue of CS/Comunicazioni Sociali, 2011, co-edited with Elena Mosconi). Miguel Mera is a composer of music for the moving image and a musicologist. His film and television music has been screened and broadcast around the world. He is the author of Mychael Danna's The Ice Storm: A Film Score Guide (2007), and co-editor of European Film Music (2006) and The Routledge Companion to Screen Music and Sound (2017). He serves on the editorial boards of Music, Sound, and the Moving Image, Music and the Moving Image, The Journal of Film Music, and The Soundtrack. Miguel is a Reader in the Department of Music and Associate Dean (Research and Enterprise) for the School of Arts and Social Sciences at City, University of London.
Release date NZ
June 30th, 2019
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Contributors
  • Edited by Alessandro Bratus
  • Edited by Massimo Locatelli
  • Edited by Miguel Mera
Pages
162
ISBN-13
9788869772320
Product ID
31938088

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