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Domesticating Otherness: The Snake Charmer in American Popular Culture. A.J. Racy

Por: Racy, A.JTipo de material: ArtículoArtículoIdioma: Inglés Series Ethnomusicology. Journal of the Society for Ethnomusicology ; no. 2Detalles de publicación: Illinois-XXU : University of Illinois Press, 2016Descripción: páginas 197-232: ilustraciones en blanco y negroTema(s): INSTRUMENTOS DE VIENTO | MUSICA | ENCANTADORES SERPIENTES En: Sociey for Ethnomusicology Ethnomusicology. Journal of the Society for EthnomusicologyResumen: Metaphoric allusions to otherness are widely encountered and of- tentimes taken for granted. Exploring the use of the snake-charming theme in American popular media, I discuss why and how such a supposedly foreign theme is borrowed, metaphorically adapted, and locally applied. The central premise is that such a process is integrally linked to the borrower's own history and cultural outlooks. Besides reflecting my own first-hand experience, the nar- ratives engage relevant discourses on representation, exoticism, imagination, metaphor, and power. Generally, the research illustrates how tropes of otherness acquire their forms and meanings as they become localized, or domesticated.Existencias: 1
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Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore
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Revistas E/ ETHNOM/ vol.60(2)/ 2016 no.2 1 Disponible HEMREV029154

Metaphoric allusions to otherness are widely encountered and of- tentimes taken for granted. Exploring the use of the snake-charming theme in American popular media, I discuss why and how such a supposedly foreign theme is borrowed, metaphorically adapted, and locally applied. The central premise is that such a process is integrally linked to the borrower's own history and cultural outlooks. Besides reflecting my own first-hand experience, the nar- ratives engage relevant discourses on representation, exoticism, imagination, metaphor, and power. Generally, the research illustrates how tropes of otherness acquire their forms and meanings as they become localized, or domesticated.

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