Digital Repository

Engineering the Minorities: Intangible Cultural Heritage Preservation and Transformations of Folk Music in 21st Century Mainland China

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Tang, Kai
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-11T07:19:13Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-11T07:19:13Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.citation Tang, Kai (2023), Engineering the Minorities: Intangible Cultural Heritage Preservation and Transformations of Folk Music in 21st Century Mainland China, 12th Symposium of the ICTMD study group on music and minorities with a joint day with the study group on indigenous music and dance, Department of fine arts, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/27284
dc.description.abstract Based on ethnographic research conducted with minority musicians from 24 ethnic groups of mainland China, this presentation will give a short overview of traditions and changes and of underlying structures and driving forces in 21st century Chinese folk music. To facilitate understanding of social and political realities of Chinese minorities, special attention will be given to the centralized control mechanism that covers every region of mainland China and all aspects of China’s aboveground musical life. It will reveal how schools, publishers, libraries and archives, performance venues and organizers, print and broadcast media, and research institutions have been operating, as parts of the control system and in the name of Intangible Cultural Heritage Protection, to shape the musical traditions of the ethnic minorities into components of a cultural unity-in-diversity. The shaped heritage influences the formation of collective memories and cultural identities, the officially authenticated cultural representations have resulted in widely shared misunderstandings of the minorities, and the promotion of invented traditions is generating minorities within the minorities. Through this case study, the presentation will call for reflection on commonsense knowledge and conception about China’s minority and disadvantaged groups and some established methodological approaches and it aims to bring new theoretical perspectives to the study of minorities. en_US
dc.publisher Department of fine arts, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka en_US
dc.title Engineering the Minorities: Intangible Cultural Heritage Preservation and Transformations of Folk Music in 21st Century Mainland China en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search Digital Repository


Browse

My Account