1997
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8373.00026
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Popular music in a transnational world: the construction of local identities in Singapore

Abstract: As an area of geographical inquiry, popular music has not been explored to any large extent. Where writings exist, they have been somehwat divorced from recent theoretical and methodological questions that have rejuvenated social and cultural geography. In this paper, I focus on one arena which geographers can develop in their analysis of popular music, namely, the exploration of local influences and global forces in the production of music. In so doing, I wish to explore how local resources intersect with glo… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Significant bodies of work have also been produced by Lily Kong, mainly focusing on Singapore (e.g. Kong 1997, 2006), and Chris Gibson, predominantly focusing on Australia. The works of Chris Gibson, along with John Connell, have made a particularly noteworthy contribution to the field.…”
Section: Music Place and Geographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant bodies of work have also been produced by Lily Kong, mainly focusing on Singapore (e.g. Kong 1997, 2006), and Chris Gibson, predominantly focusing on Australia. The works of Chris Gibson, along with John Connell, have made a particularly noteworthy contribution to the field.…”
Section: Music Place and Geographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lily Kong (1997) has explored how Singaporean artists construct a national identity while using elements of globalized popular music. Olaf Kuhlke (2009) contends that the music of the Canadian band the Rheostatics is representative of contemporary Canadian identity.…”
Section: Music Place Identity and Everyday Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, when cultural geographers have addressed music it has often been in terms of region or place-specific music (Carney 1999;Curtis and Rose 1994), diffusion (Glasgow 1994), or globalization (Kong 1997;Lovering 1998). More recently, critical social geographers have addressed the geographies of music production and consumption (Leyshon, Matless and Revill 1998).…”
Section: Popular Music and The Teaching Of Geographymentioning
confidence: 99%