Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka

Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka: Call For Papers

Date: 26 (Sat)-27 (Sun) July 2008
Venue: Osaka City University, Takahara Hall
(3-3-138, Sugimoto-cho, Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka-shi, JAPAN)
http://www.osaka-cu.ac.jp/english/info/access.html

Organized by:
Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group (https://interasiapop.org/)
and
Urban Culture Research Centre (UCRC), Osaka City University
(http://www.lit.osaka-cu.ac.jp/UCRC/index-e.html)

Conference theme: Globalizing Music Industry in Asia

Rationale:
We are pleased to announce the first Inter-Asia Popular Music Conference in Osaka in collaboration with Osaka City University, Urban Culture Research Center (UCRC) in July 2008.

Over the last two decades, the study of popular music has been dramatically developed in the interdisciplinary fields from musicology, sociology, literature, history, education, anthropology, to media & communications and cultural studies since the establishment of the International Association for Study of Popular Music (IASPM) in 1981. A similar trend has also been observed in the Asian continent where more and more scholars are involved in the critical studies of popular music.

Today, however, we face two major problems to be considered generally among scholars of non-Western(Asian) popular music cultures: Firstly, while it has been well established academically as an distinctive field of study in Western campuses, research efforts on popular music in the Asian contexts remains largely scattered, limited without. There are currently no institutions devoted to popular music studies within Asian universities, and the more sustained interactions of scholars in this field in the region have also been hampered by language barriers. Secondly, in spite of its more globally diffused patterns of distribution, appropriation and consumption, scholarly accounts on Asian popular music has been predominantly centered within contemporary national boundaries Such existing paradigms would have to be revised in light of the recognition of the socio-cultural fluidity arising from developments in communication technologies as well as more intensified rates of human migration.

As part of our preliminary efforts to address theses issues these problems, we launched an online based, transnational research portal, Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group in 2007, and have also started discussions among about 40 scholars not only in Asia but also in Europe and the United States.

In the first international conference has a main theme entitled ‘Globalizing Music Industry in Asia’, by which we would like to focus on the recent situation and historical trajectory of popular music genres in Asia like rock, pop music to hip hop and dance music which have been heavily influenced by globalization of music industry, in particular, the restructuring of global capital, the radical change of distribution network including media and internet and the transformation of fan’s practices.

Possible session themes:
Music, internet and piracy (Copyright)
Beatles in Asia
Hip hop in Asia
Transnational flow and consumption of popular music
Border-crossing Pop stars and their mediation of Asian modernities
Recycling of old Asian pop in film/drama
Asians in global experimental music scenes
Transformation of creative labour in music industry
Inter-Asian collaboration/adaptation of popular music
Music consumption by/of trans-Asian migrants
iPod and mobile music
Music for Practical uses (film, drama, game soundtrack)
Asian diasporic music outside Asia

*Any other suggestions will be welcomed.

Schedule:
30 May The first deadline of application
26-27 July Conference

Call for papers
The organizers of Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka would like to invite paper presenters to send their abstracts (not more than 250 words) before 31 May, 2008 to; IAPMS2008@yahoo.co.jp

If you have any inquiries, please be free ask Yoshitaka Mori:
IAPMS2008@yahoo.co.jp

Registration Fees:
Faculty member and staff: 3000 JPY (=US$ 30)
Student:2000 JPY (=US$20)

Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka Organizing
Committee:

Shin NAKAGAWA,
Professor and Director of Urban Culture Research Center Osaka Ciity
University, Japan

Hyunjoon SHIN, Professor, Sungkonghoe University, Korea

Yoshitaka MORI, Associate Professor, Tokyo University of the Arts

Anthony FUNG, Associate Professor, Chinese University, Hong Kong

Kyoko KOIZUMI, Associate Professor, Aichi University of Education, Japan

Tunghung Ho, Associate Professor, Fu-jen University, Taiwan

Satoshi MASUDA, Associate Professor, Osaka City University, Japan

Kai Khun LIEW, Postdoctoral Fellow, National University of Singapore,
Singapore

Jung-Yup LEE, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA/Korea

The 1st Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group Conference in OSAKA, 2008

by mouri

Dear all,We  are  now pleased to announce that we will organize the 1st Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group Conference on 26th & 27th July 2008 in Osaka, Japan,  jointly with Urban Culture Research Center (UCRC), Osaka City University. Please write down the date above in your diary.  As it will be a call-for-paper conference, please encourage your colleagues and friends to participate, too. The detail will be circulated soon. Wait for a further announcement.Yoshitaka Mouri, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music

Conferencing at Minshung (Taiwan) and Drinking at Taipei (Underground Society)

by homey81

Last week I had been in Taiwan for particpating a conference about “digital culture.”  The conference venue was at National Chungcheng University at Minshung, a small city in Southern Taiwan. Among members of our group, Yoshitaka was there as “keyote speaker,” Eva as moderator/interpretator and Miao-ju as one of the hosts of the conference.

On Novermber 15, one day before the conference, Kelly Hu, who is not a member of our group but took much pains to organize the conference, and Miao-ju took us to a nice bar/restaurant and I felt very nostalgic when I saw old-style vinyl records there.

Also was there old-style television set, which seemed to be manufactured in the 1970s. They reminded me of “postwar history.”

On 17 November (the second day of the conference), Yoshitaka gave a keynote speech and Eva interpreted his talks. His talk was about the evolution of “J-pop” associating it with the development of moblie/digital technology and subcultural configurations in Japan. I would be happier if Yoshitaka can tell something about his talk~

After 2 days’ conferencing, I moved to Taipei (on 18 November) and met Tunghung for drinking in a pub/livehouse of which he is one of the owners. The name of the pub/livehouse is “underground society.” You can see how it looks like in the pictures below.

Tunghung showed us a “certificate” which permits live performance in the pub. I thought it was the outcome of his long time struggle. Tunghung, right? Nearly everywhere in Asia, we have faced with this kind of problem: fighting against bureacracy who tries to control public space for music performance.

Samll livehouses in Asian cities shares something similar. Crummy, small, dirty, untidy with posters here and there. Though it was the third time that I visited here, I always feel quite comfortable and nostalgic… As there was no live performance in Sunday night, Tunghung, who is always energetic, didn’t mind taking a role of DJ and played music which let me (us) know the history of Taiwanese popular music.

Before going out of Underground, I coudn’t resist the feeling of taking a photo with Tunghung (center) and Yoshitaka (right), who are one of the most famous music critic/scholar in Taiwan and Japan, respectively.

If anybody visit Taipei, I think he will welcome you. Tunghung, right? 🙂

HJ

2006 Asia Youth Culture Camp (Gwangju, October 27~28 2006)

by homey81

2006 Asia Youth Culture Camp: Doing Cultural Spaces in Asia (Gwangju, October 27~28 2006)

http://www.asiacultureforum.org/AYCC

 

Panel: Popular Culture and Music Industry in Asian Dynamics

Re-defining the Aesthetics of Hip Hop Music in Hong Kong

Li, Wai-chung

In Hong Kong, the first generation of hip hop music gained public attention with Softhard and LMF in the mid-1980s and early 1990s respectively. As a result of glocalization, particular histories and cultural specificities are constructed within the local hip hop music scene.
This paper is based on a case study from November 2005: Fama (a local hip hop group) performed its latest song “Dating Chet Lam,” featuring the singing and guitar phrases of Chet Lam, a local singer-songwriter. One rapper (C-Kwan) lip-synced with Lam’s distinctive phrases in the performance, while another (6Wing) rapped a commentary making fun of the song’s lyrics. The audience members screamed and applauded not for the content or the flow of rapping, but especially for the realness of which C-Kwan was able to imitate Lam’s singing.
While aesthetic standards within US hip hop culture involve rapping and DJing techniques, I argue that the aesthetics of local hip hop music have been augmented with different meanings towards appreciation. Hong Kong hip hop is not just about the flow and lyrical meaning of the rapping, or the sampling techniques and background arrangements of the DJs’ productions. In fact, admire for the ability to imitate takes priority over all the above aesthetic standards.
By re-defining the aesthetics of hip hop music in a local context, this presentation will focus on the attitudes of local audiences and artists towards hip hop music. Both social and historical factors will be analyzed to explain the reasons behind these locally-developed attitudes.

The Politics and Economics of Music: Case of Chinese Rock Music in Malaysia

Chan Lih Shing (& Wang Lay Kim)

In 1986, the Home Ministry banned all open-air rock concerts. The authorities labeled such concerts as deviant. They particularly singled out Malay rock concerts arguing that such concerts transgressed the National Culture Policy. The National Culture Policy is based on the Malay culture, and Islam. However, in 2000, a transnational company sponsored a rock concert featuring a number of local groups that are popular with the youth were allowed to go on stage in Kuala Lumpur. It is apparent that policies are implemented inconsistently. It is in this backdrop this paper examines a local independent label rock group called Hung Huo. The group adopts a DIY (Do It Yourself) spirit to produce and distribute their own albums. This is a deliberate act on the part of the group to resist control by and dependence on big companies in the music industry. This paper will look at the political and economic factors that impinge on the development Huang Huo as well as their freedom to explore different musical styles.

Panel: Art, Creative Industries and Cultural Policies

Consumption as Emancipation, But What Comes After We Are Emancipated?: Theories on Culture in Postwar-Japan

Motoaki Takahara (mtki@nifty.com)

Culture became an important issue both in production and consumption after creative economy arises. At this stage culture has particular ambiguity; on the one hand it is seen as the source of creativity and profit. On the other hand it is indicated as a causes of the trouble especially among youth.
Japan is not an exception in this ambiguity. Japanese government is trying to activate youth’s creativity and utilize it in “content business” —mainly game and anime industries— as the next leading commodities of the state.
In the meantime the most popular theory of the reason why “freeter” (the shortened form of “free albeiter”, which has similar nuance as McJob workers in English) increased is also culture. According to this theory, they escape from the world of labor, being too much absorbed into cultural or hobby activity, so they are responsible even if they are low-paid.
Hence the concept of culture is in a contradictory position in current Japan. In this presentation I try to look back the position of culture in social and political theories in postwar-Japan.
The first example is Japanese mass-society theory, which emerged just after the defeat of World War II, when nobody believed Japan would become the second richest country. At this time consumption, or being able to buy things except food expenses, is interpreted simply as democratization, or even emancipation, from the defeat, poverty, the past oppressive military state, and also the traditional feudalistic social hierarchy.
This original view has been casting a shadow on the continued debate on culture, especially on the left side. Japanese version of old left, postmodernism, and cultural studies share the common optimistic perception on culture, which clearly differs the English version of these concepts.
One important result of it is, after Japan has got into creative economy era, it became so difficult to articulate culture and the global transformation of labor market. At what point can we celebrate culture, if it could not create employment, after all? On the contrary, industrial sector has not understood the utility of creativity in Japan, and post-industrial sector —typically freelance and fluid employment— is increasing only as subcontractors of existing huge conglomerates and another freeter farm. Here I try to portrait the Japanese context of “informational society” (M. Castells), from middle-ranged historical analysis on theories of culture.

From Innocence to Self-consciousness : The Flight of Thai Creative Class

Viriya Sawangchot

Creative class as a key concept invented by Richard Florida, a professor of Regional Development, Carnegie Mellon University, USA, in his bestseller book, “The Rise of The Creative Class” (2002). Within this concept, Florida believed an appropriation of creative labour by creative ethos could result in products as much as in social. It argued that work-related activities provided a better way to achieve well-being and human development.
This key concept referred to creative workers in United State of America in 1990’s, who worked in what was meant by creative industries, advertisement, architecture, Arts, crafts, design, fashion design, film, entertainment software, television & radio, performance, printing, software design, etc. And as far as it can expected, this concept also referred to new cultural economy produced by Tony Blair’s Creative Industries Task Force (CITF) in 1998. No doubt that there were national-cultural and socio-political explanations for the differences between how creative workers were perceived and constituted in the UK, North America and the least of the World. To my knowledge, many countries in Asia have the media and cultural policy like Blair’s Creative Industries Task Force, such as Korea, Japan, China, Singapore, and Thailand. But there is not yet to be a study that inquires into the different national and regional formations of creative class.
In this paper, I will investigate the nature of the Thai creative classes through their self-directed productions and consumption of products. In doing so, I would like to talk about “Dek Toe” or “Innocence” in English, the documentary film which directed and self-funded by Areeya Sirisopa, former Miss Thailand and Nisa Kongsri, an advertising creative professional. The film was shot at Baan Mae Toe School, a hill tribe village, Chiang Mai, North of Thailand and about a journey of senior pupils, Mor 3., from the hill to the sea at the first of their lives. The first shown of Dek Toe was at Pusan Film festival 2005 and at Lido art house in Bangkok two months later. After the show at Lido, its has Dek Toe’s phenomenon in Thailand. For instances, the directors received a ton of good review for audience and Baan Mae Toe School got donation of money more enough for pupil’s free lunch again. Ironically, however, the phenomenon was so complicated, between film market and non-market value, human development and representation of the hill tribe, ethos of directors and creative capital. So how, we might ask, can Thai creative class be political creativity enough for socioeconomic development?

2007 International Conference on Inter-Asian Culture, Communication, Conflict, and Peace (Hong Kong, May 4~5 2007)

by Homey81

 

http://enweb.cityu.edu.hk/interasian/index.html

A2: Articulating Voices
Chair: Dr. Hyunjoon Shin

Local T.V: Look Others and Know Others, We Need Places for Our Voice
Dr. Phattar Burarak

Reclaiming Malaysia: Mainstream Cinema, Institutionalised Racism and
the Challenge of the Indies
Mr. Zaharom Nain, Universiti Sains Malaysia

Resistance or Submission? Herstory on Violence against Women in Thailand
Ms. Chanattee Tinnam, Chulalongkorn University

Left of the Dial: Reflections of a Malaysian Underground Musician-Academic
Mr. Azmyl Yusof, Taylor’s University College Malaysia

A3: Cultural Representations and Consumptions
Chair: Ms. Wang Lay Kim

Reading the Eye as a Haunting and a Desirable Organ
Mr. Nicolas Wong, University of Hong Kong

The Politics of Consumption of Single Career Women in their 20s and 30s with Advanced Degrees
Ms. Mo Hyun-joo, Yonsei University

Dance Music on the Beach: The Study of Subculture Travelers and Orientalism Desire
Mr. Viriya Sawangchot, Watanasala Centre for Cultural Studies

B1: Social Relationships and Cultural Imaginations across borders
Chair: Dr. Francis Lee / Guest Commentator: Prof. Ubonrat Siriyuvasak

Crossing borders: Vietnamese women and Chinese Men at the Vietnam-China borderlands
Dr. Chan Yuk Wah, City University of Hong Kong

“Home is(not) Where We Sing For”: Karaoke and Democratic Voice of Burmese Migrant Worker
Dr. Siriporn Somboonburana, Walailak University

The Invention of post/Cold war ‘Region’in South Korea
Dr. Yerim Kim, Sungkonghoe University

B3: Special panel on Canto-pop in Hong Kong
Chair: Dr. Angel Lin
Panelists:
Exploring the Origins of “Hip Hop Rap” and “Non-Hip Hop Rap” in Hong Kong,
Miss Li Wai-chung, Chinese University of Hong Kong

After The Fall: Mapping Hong Kong Cantopop in the Global Era”
Prof. Stephen Yiu-wai Chu, Hong Kong Baptist University

Canto-pop and Limitations on Creativity (tentative title)
Dr. Sean Tierney, Chinese University of Hong Kong

Cultural Typhoon 2006 (Shimokitazawa, June 30~July 2 2006)

by Homey81

Cultural Typhoon 2006 (Shimokitazawa, June 30~July 2 2006)

Cultural Typhoon

http://www.cultural-typhoon.org/2006/about.html     

Panel Title: Transforming Music in the age of Digitalization and Gobalization

The panel looks at the current situation of popular music industry in Japan and Korea, which is facing rapid transformation of systems of production, distribution and consumption due to digitalization and globalization. While this new situation requires music industry to reconstruct itself on the one hand, it also offers new creative networks which travel beyond existing national/local boundaries on the other. Through the comparative study of music industry and music itself in Japan and Korea, the panel hopes to prropose a new way of understanding of trans-cultural music today.

Moderator: Yoshitaka Mouri (Tokyo University of Fine Art and Music)

Panelist:

Hyunhoon Shin (Sungkonghoe University)

Min-ah Kwon (Tokyo University)

増渕 敏之 (Tokyo University)

 

IASPM 14th Biennial Conference (Mexico City, June 25~29 2007)

by Homey81

 

IASPM 14th Biennial Conference

Univerdad Iberoamericana, ciudad de mexico
Junio 25-29, 2007

Here are the list of the presentations related to popular music in Asia and/or by our members.  Let me know if there is anyone missing. (I apologize in advance in that case!)

Transformation of music industry in digital age: The case of South Korea
Jung-yup Lee (University of Massachusetts Amherst).
Hyunjoon Shin (Sungkonghoe University).

Emerging Mobile Subjectivities in the Age of Portable Digital Music in the City
Yoshitaka Mouri (Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music).

The American Pop Music’s Invasion on South Korea
Donghyup Ryu (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA).

A View from America: Japanese Popular Music Performing Japaneseness
Chris Tonelli (University of California, San Diego).

Canto-Pop: The Connotations of Its Cover Versions Over The Past Three Decades
Ivy Man (University of Hong Kong).

Ring My Bell: Cell Phones and the Japanese Music Market
Noriko Manabe (CUNY Graduate Center).

What happened to “Asians” when Asian-American indie rock met Asian indie rock
Hyunjoon Shin (Sungkonghoe University, Institute for East Asian Studies).

Click here to see the complete program.

Also, here for some of the photos taken from the conference:
http://picasaweb.google.com/sonicscape/MexicoCityConference?authkey=vRvit35TKVM

 

Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society 2007 Shanghai Conference (Shanghai, June 15~17 2007)

by Homey81

Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society 2007 Shanghai Conference
Conditions of Knowledge and Cultural Productions

June 16-17, 2007 (Friday to Sunday)
June 15, 2007, Pre-Conference for graduate students
Venue: Shanghai University, Shanghai, China

16. Title: Cultural industries and Cultural policy in inter-Asian context
Organizer and moderator: Anthony Fung (Chinese University of Hong Kong)

Oranizer:Anthony Fung (Chinese University of Hong Kong )

Panelists:Anthony Fung (Chinese University of Hong Kong )
Nationalism and Cultural Industries: the Case of Music industries in China
Tung-hung Ho (Fu-jen University ) & Kai-tung Zheng (Tamkang University )
Cultural Policy in Limbo: The rhetoric of “Cultural Creative Industry” and its impact on cultural industries in Taiwan
Jung-yup Lee (Massachusetts University )
When Development Meets Culture: The “Cultural Turn”in Cultural Policy in Korea
Discussant: Sunyoung Yoo (Korea Press Foundation)

18. Title:Rock cultures in East and Southeast Asia at the 21th century

Organizer:Hyun-joon Shin (Sungkonghoe University )

Moderator:Tung-hung Ho (何東洪,Fu-jen University )

Panelists:
Viriya Sawangchot (Watanasala Center for Cultural Studies )
Chat Rak Rock : the Question on“Thainess” in Thai Rock Culture
Miao-ju Jian (簡妙如,Chungcheng University )
Into the Fuji Rock Festival Scene: Through the Gaze of Fans from Taiwan
Hyun-joon Shin (Sungkonghoe University )
Rock Cultures in Korea: From local Generational Politics to Regional Cultural Economy?

24. Title:The Cute, the Snazzy, and the Dexterous:Popular Arts and Youth Cultural Practices in East Asia

Organizer:Eva Tsai (Taiwan Normal University )

Panelists:

Kyoko Koizumi (Aichi University )
Visual J-Rock and Cosplay Subculture
Changeun Cho (Myung Ji University )
To Work As a Creative Worker In Hongik University Area, Formerly Subculture Space In Seoul
Larissa Hjorth (RMIT University )
Playing at Being Mobile Gaming, Cute Culture and Mobile Devices in South Korea
Eva Tsai (Taiwan Normal University )
Fringes and Interstices: Stationery Commodities and Youth Culture in East Asia

Discussant:Jo C. H. Chen (Taiwan Normal University)

15. Title:Border-crossing Cultural Flows in Cold War and Post-Cold War East Asia

Organizer: Jee-soon Hong (The New School University)

Moderator: Jaeho Kang (The New School University)

Panelists:

Jee-soon Hong (The New School University)
Jackie Chan and Golden Harvest in Cold War Asia
Pei-Yin Lin (National University of Singapore )
A Tale of Two Cities: Li Hanxiang, King Hu, and Taiwanese Film Industry in the 1960s and early 1970s
Yiu Fai Chow (University of Amsterdam )
Shoot the Dragon: A Lyrical Engagement with Chineseness
Motoko Yabuki (Osaka University)
J-pop in Chinese Speaking World

Here are some photos:

2007. 06. 14 ~ 2007. 06. 18 Shanghai

ARI Workshop on Asian Pop Music in Transition: New Economy, New Subjectivities and Inter-Asian Perspective (Singapore, March 3~4 2007)

by Homey81

Date: 03/03/2007 – 04/03/2007
Time: 0900 – 1700
Venue: ARI Seminar Room
469A Tower Block #10-04, Bukit Timah Road
National University of Singapore
Organisers: Dr SHIN Hyunjoon, Prof CHUA Beng Huat

Description:
The meaning of ‘New Economy’, especially within the Asian context, is still vague. However, it has effectively ruled our everyday life at least since 2000s. The advent of New Economy has broken down the wall between culture and economy, art and commerce, work and leisure, and moreover, co-optation and resistance. This workshop investigates whether the rule of New Economy signifies the pure and simple victory of ‘cultural capitalism’ or it opens another possibility of new practices along with new subjectivities.

The workshop focuses at popular music and music industry in Asia. More specifically, the papers in the workshop investigates new subjectivities associated with new “technoscape” and “mediascape”. Some of them deal with critical inquiry about cultural industries (music industry) that is under big bang by the development of digital techonology, others are about the research on subcultural or post-subcultural realities. Hopefully, they can contribute strengthening and enriching inter-Asian perspective, which has attended heterogeneous movements in the region.

Organizer:
Chua Beng Huat (National University of Singapore)
Shin Hyun-joon (Visiting Fellow Researcher, National University of Singapore)

Presenters:
Yoshitaka Mori (Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, Japan)
Anthony Fung (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
Jungyup Lee (University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA/Korea)
Hyunjoon Shin (Sungkonghoe University, Korea)
Miao-ju Jian (Chungcheng University, Taiwan)
Yiu Fai Chow (the Amsterdam School for Communications Research, Hong Kong)
Kyoko Koizumi (Aichi University of Education, Japan)
Tunghung Ho (Fu-jen University, Taiwan)
Viriya Sawangchot (Watanasala Centre for Cultural Studies, Thailand)
Angel Lin (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
Eugene Dairianathan (National Institute of Education, Singapore)

Discussants:
Christopher Wan-ling Wee (Nanyang Technology University, Singapore)
Tomoko Shimizu (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

Program & Abstract

Imaging Community/Nation without (cultural) Borders: An International Conference on Inter Asian Culture, Communication, Conflict and Peace (Bangkok, July 28~29 2006)

by Homey81

Panel 6: Border-crossing Asian Cultural Economy

  • Korean Entertainment Companies in the Emerging Cultural Economy of Asian Pop

Shin Hyunjoon
Sungkonghoe University (Korea)

The discourses on popular music in Asia have been heavily associated with local politics within the boundary of a country (or a nation), focusing on generation, gender, race, ethnicity and, most of all, nationality. However, at least since late 1990s, border-crossing cultural flows have produced trans-Asian music culture which is beyond the control of national cultural policy, along with nationalist backlash against cultural trans-Asianism. This ambivalent phenomenon cannot be easily explained by the simple effects of cultural globalization. If there exits ‘Asian culture industry’ and/or ‘cultural economy of Asian pop’, how is and will be it transform popular culture in Asia? This paper attempts to analyze the process of the transformation from the perspective of political economy, focusing on ‘Asianizing’ strategies of Korean ‘entertainment companies’ and ‘content industry’.

  • Commodification of the Divided Korea – the case of Panmunjom Tour

Hirata Yukie
Yonsei University (Korea/Japan)

Panmunjon is the symbol of the divided Korea, which has established its status as a tourist spot for foreigners. Panmunjom means Joint Security Area(JSA) and is situated in the demilitarized zone separating North and South Korea. Since the UN force and Korean People’s Army guard the zone together, it is an excluded a north-south administrative district region. Panmunjon serves as the symbol of the tragedy of the divided Korea, the place in which separated families (risan kajok) gather, as the only passage, for various north-south political talks, and also has the duty as the educational spot which carries out security education to South Koreans. And for foreigners, Panmunjom is a popular tourist spot which gives ‘danger’ and strain. As globalization advances, touring outside the border is generalized increasingly. Panmunjom, where one can feel ‘danger’ easily, has a special aspect on that time and spatial meaning.
In this presentation, I will focus on Panmunjom as a tourist spot which has had such inconsistent and ironical duties. I will also examine what Panmunjom’s case shows to the global society, focusing on the process of being tourist spot, and the ‘national narrative’ which appeared in the process of commodification of the historical space symbolized as the Korean tragedy.

  • The Meaning of Screen Quota Cut and Movie Culture

Lee Jongnim
Sungkonghoe University (Korea)

This paper argues that FTA (Free-Trade Agreement) have effect on culture industry, especially film industry in Korea. The Screen Quota cut shocked the Korea public. Korean movies are very successful in numbers, far above the quota, and abolishing protectionism is always the right economic strategy. Screen Quota system has been a stumbling block between South Korea and U.S, who have been trying to conclude an FTA since 1999. The U.S. has been required the reduction of Screen Quota system as precondition to start an FTA with South Korea. However, the controversy over whether to reduce Screen Quota system or not has been continued. After all, Screen Quota system is reduced, Korean movie will be annihilated. therefore this debate is complicated. In order to solve this situation, analysis result to make discussion about that screen quota cut is connected with local movie culture or Asia culture and have a political significance.

Panel 7(a): Popular Music and Cultural Politics

  • From ‘Anti-China Invasion’ to ‘East-Core Asia’-The articulation of musical festival and politics in Taiwan

Ho Tunghung
Fo-Guang College (Taiwan)

Political engagement of popular music has long been thought as an essential form of cultural politics. Yet young people’s use of popular music as political expressions might vary in different socio-cultural and musical contexts. So in modern history, popular music might be articulated with anti-globalization actions, anti-authoritarian actions, anti- racism, anti-sexism, or even anti-Americanism. In our case, it is Taiwan-Chinese political tension on which this paper focuses.
Due to Taiwan’s particular political situation, pro-Taiwan independent(TI, hereafter)and anti-TI has fiercely confronted with each other for last two decades. The musical festival examined here is strongly recognized as pro- TI. But since its first launch, TRA, the independent musical organization, has changed its ‘politico-musical overtone’. From all- domestic bands to including East Asian(Japanese, Korean, ex-Chinese, and Singapore), US , and Australian bands to the festival, its core slogans, started as ‘Anti-China Invasion’, via ‘Say Yes To Taiwan’ to this year’s ‘East-Core Asia’ signals not only its practice of political rhetoric , but also its attempt to form a cross-national musical community.
Therefore, by studying this case, three key issues are explored:
1) To what extent can ‘music sound’ be voiced as pro-TI movement?
2) If as stated in this year’s pamphlet, democracy in Asia is the key issue while anti-China became implicit, then to what extent a cross-national boundary community can be achieved?
3) Above all, if music’s social force can travel national boundary, then to what extent the festival can be seen as a means to deal with TI ideology critically when it has been highly ethno-nationalist?

  • The Politics and Economics of Music: Case of Chinese Rock Music in Malaysia

Chan Lih Shing & Wang Lay Kim
Sains Universiti (Malaysia)

In 1986, the Home Ministry banned all open-air rock concerts. The authorities labeled such concerts as deviant. They particularly singled out Malay rock concerts arguing that such concerts transgressed the National Culture Policy. The National Culture Policy is based on the Malay culture, and Islam. However, in 2000, a transnational company sponsored a rock concert featuring a number of local groups that are popular with the youth were allowed to go on stage in Kuala Lumpur. It is apparent that policies are implemented inconsistently. It is in this backdrop this paper examines a local independent label rock group called Hung Huo. The group adopts a DIY (Do It Yourself) spirit to produce and distribute their own albums. This is a deliberate act on the part of the group to resist control by and dependence on big companies in the music industry. This paper will look at the political and economic factors that impinge on the development Huang Huo as well as their freedom to explore different musical styles.

  • “New Labour” or “New Elite”: Hybridizing Britpop in Thai Pop Culture

Viriya Sawangchot
Watanasala Centre for Cultural Studies (Thailand)

Britpop was a musical discourse rather than a genre as such and was born of both a frustration at the dominance of American bands in the British music scene of the early of 1990s in time of Conservative government in England. But following the collapse of the Conservative vote in the 1997 election, the Labour government announced the new formation of Britain economic policy by new labour concept “see the arts instrumentally as a means to help achieve of British life and social regeneration”. This economic policy emphasized certainly on export of Britpop’s use of national image as well.
As a musical discourse, Britpop rally around the world by hit bands and cool Medias. As a cultural discourse, Britpop cease to have defining effect upon ‘alternative life style’ of youth culture around the world. Within theses discourses, the new frontier of national and political ideology does not depend on state’s territory anymore. However, these discourses also draw new boundaries which become a battleground of border between national community and cosmopolitan.
In this paper, I would like to explore the significance of cultural hybridity of “TrueBrit” of Britpop in Thai Pop Culture, especially about politic of youth culture. The paper will also raise questions about the multi-cultural identities as well as the limits of imagined community in the complexity of global media culture.

  • Jazz and Giants of Jazz: The Dialectical Juxtaposition of a Pop Culture and the Mainstream

Chi Yu Chang
Ming-chuan University (Taiwan)

The jazz musicians of the United States have created a legacy of the American dreams. After scrutinizing Studs Terkel’s interpretation of early jazz masters’ life and work experiences, I find that the existing injustice and inequality aggravated by race, class, and gender biases seem irrelevant to or indecisive in one’s struggle for success or self-actualization. This does not necessarily mean that those negative factors are deliberately played down or ignored, or that the author’s viewpoints are based on white chauvinism. Rather, it implies, first, a common denominator—a list of values or/and personal qualities that are shared with whoever wishes to realize a dream; second, a cultural connotation of jazz as an art form beyond what it is—a symbol of faith, freedom, and possibilities; and third, a reminder that jazz, despite its pop nature for fun, exemplifies a professional field in which adventure and competition appear desirable to enterprising people when explored within the context of American culture. In short, jazz, in Terkel’s allusion, shows how and why social mobility intended for fame and finance can be achieved in a border-crossing effort, which are what this paper attempts to deal with.

Panel 7(b) Hip Hop and Youth Cultural Practices in Three East Asian Societies

  • What’s up Man!!: Voice of Da Resistance and Da Violence in Thai Hop-Hop Music

Kachachai Wichaidit
Chulalongkorn University

The purpose of this research is to study the use of Hip Hop music as a mode of expression for Thai Youth to representing ideology of resistance through youth culture in forms of Thai rap music. “Hip Hop music” or “Rap music” is one of elements in Hip Hop culture , which is the aspects of African-American youth culture originated in the Bronx ,New York ,during the mid-1970s. Today Hip Hop music is very popular over the world and it also rework as a mode of expression for a range of local issues. Hip Hop music is a symbolic of resistance musicThis study will survey the character of Thai Hip Hop music and the Hip Hop scene in Thailand by using of documentary research and observations. In this study will representing the origin of African-American Hip Hop culture, the diffusion of Hip Hop culture around the world , the use of Hip Hop music as a tool to display the ideologies of youths , the development of hip hop music in Thai society and the ideology and the points of view of Thai youths to the society that are presented through hip hop music.

  • Racing Late Modernity in Taiwan Streets: Beat, Time, and Hip-Hop Dance Communities

Yuh-jen Lu
Shih Chien University

This project explores a theoretical perspective for Hip-Hop dance practice from bottom up, that is concerned with an alternative “civil society” and an act of community consciousness in Taiwan. It proposes to study the dance genre commonly labeled as a subculture of young generations with a particular focus on the production of “biao-wu” (dance-racing)-a combination of velocity, violence, and dancing pleasure in relation to late modernity. Given that Pop culture’s edge is often shifting, this study will correlate Zygmun Bauman’s liquid modernity with a critical view on consumerism and mass media, which will offer a new matrix for a reconfiguration of subject, dance and community. In the sense of racing, what cultural meaning of modernity does Hip-hop street dance represent in Taiwan? If street dance is a community act of hip-hoppers, then what does it accomplish? How has the trajectory of Hip-Hop dance complicated in relationship to the development of contemporary politics, media, marketing, mainstream dance and subculture in Taiwan? What role(s) does Taiwanese hip-hop community play in conjunction with globalization? Why do Taiwanese hip-hoppers construct their own autonomy or independence from elsewhere? It seems that the Taiwanese Hip-Hop dance is professionalized through media, what if the mass media simply lost their interests toward street dance?

  • Hip Hop in Hong Kong: Cantonese Verbal Art in the Articulation of Youthful Defiant Voices and Identities

Angel M.Y. Lin
The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Making local hip hop music and lyrics in Hong Kong has always been a marginal practice engaged in mostly by grass-root youths who find in this music genre and this trans-local sub-culture the powerful symbolisms to express their defiant voices to mainstream society. These Hong Kong youths express in their local language—Cantonese—rap lyrics their sharp critique of society, of the education system, and of what they see as mainstream hypocritical practices and overly commercialized mass media practices. Through using Cantonese raps in artful and witty ways they construct alternative discursive spaces where their defiant voices and sharp social critique can be heard in a fun yet powerful way. In this paper I shall draw on interviews of an influential Hong Kong hip hop MC—MC Yan of the former popular Hong Kong band, LMF (LazyMuthaFuckaz), and analysis of his hip hop lyrics to discuss how some youths in Hong Kong construct their powerful voices and identities in pockets of alternative spaces in a society that privileges the middle classes with their cultural capital, and in an education system where the local language of Cantonese is placed at the bottom of the linguistic hierarchy.