- English
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About This Book
Musical genres, musical instruments, and even songs can often capture the essence of a country's national character. In Whose National Music?, the first book-length study of Ecuadorian popular music, Ketty Wong explores Ecuadorians' views of their national identity in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries through an examination of the music labels they use. Wong deftly addresses the notion of mĂșsica nacional, an umbrella term for Ecuadorian popular songs often defined by the socio-economic, ethnic, racial, and generational background of people discussing the music.Wong shows how the inclusion or exclusion of elite and working-class musics within the scope of mĂșsica nacional articulate different social, ethnic, and racial configurations of the nation for white, mestizo, indigenous, and Afro-Ecuadorian populations.Presenting a macropicture of what mĂșsica nacional isâor should beâ Whose National Music? provides a lively historical trajectory of a country's diverse musical scene.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- List of Multimedia Examples
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 | The Nation in Bloom: A Search for âEcuadoriannessâ
- 2 | La MĂșsica Nacional: An Anthology of Songs
- 3 | The Pasillo: Rise and Decline of the National Song
- 4 | Rocolera Music: New Urban Sounds in the City
- 5 | Chichera Music: The âTropicalizationâ of MĂșsica Nacional
- 6 | The Tecnocumbia Boom in Ecuador: âA Letter with My Kisses Sent with Love by Internet"
- 7 | The Translocation of Ecuadorian Popular Music
- Epilogue: Whose National Music?
- Appendices
- Notes
- Glossary of Ethnic and Musical Terms
- Bibliography
- Index