3 resultados para Cultural Identity
em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland
Resumo:
Drawing from ethnographic research on Cork citys popular music scene, this article explores meanings of authenticity as constructed through geographical, social and ideological referents. It unpacks local music producers position-takings within the local field of cultural production, and locates their narrative claims to authenticity with respect to the citys strong sense of cultural identity. Their authenticating discourses are revealed as complex, often produced through building imagined communities of us (in Cork) versus them (in Dublin). The analysis indicates local actors deep sense of emotional attachment to place and to others within the music-making community, which impacts on their self-conception as creative labourers, sustains DIY, collaborative practices, and promotes a solidaristic ethos within the local music scene.
Resumo:
This article focuses on representation of Cubans in the television series Dexter, paying particular attention to episode 1.5, Love American Style with some brief references to other episodes. Assimilation, the American Dream, nationalism and crisis of identity are among the themes and issues that this article investigates. Border theory provides the dominant theoretical framework of the article.
Resumo:
How are national identities transformed? If they are mostly narratives of belonging to a community of history and destiny to which people subscribe, those boundary-making procedures that constitute the political field by instituting differences can provide a tentative answer to this question. This paper is concerned with one such cultural practice, namely film-viewing. Globalisation, a boundary-blurring practice, has been the backdrop against which transformations in national identity are often discussed, either bemoaned as cultural imperialism or celebrated as ongoing hybridisation. This piece of research took Zhang Yimous controversial film Hero as a point of departure, and asked groups of Chinese audiences how they understood the Chinese identity it conveys. Although it is still a work in progress, provisional results are reported below.