Divided Nation on Records: The Transnational Formation of Finnish Popular Music During the Gramophone Fever

Tutkimustuotos: LukuScientificvertaisarvioitu

22 Lataukset (Pure)

Abstrakti

Tikka and Suodenjoki explore how imported gramophone records shaped the idea of Finnish popular music and thereby fed the experiences of the nation among Finnish consumers in the late 1920s. They focus on Finnish-American records, which were imported to Finland by transnational agents during the so-called gramophone fever. As these records reached consumers, they tapped into experience communities that were based on the deep political divides of the newly independent nation-state, which had witnessed a Civil War in 1918. In a very short period of time, modern popular music, played and danced to in homes and public spaces, became a key means by which people lived out the nation and its class-based demarcations in their everyday practices.
AlkuperäiskieliEnglanti
OtsikkoLived Nation as the History of Experiences and Emotions in Finland, 1800-2000
ToimittajatVille Kivimäki, Sami Suodenjoki, Tanja Vahtikari
KustantajaPalgrave Macmillan
Luku6
Sivut137-161
ISBN (elektroninen)978-3-030-69882-9
ISBN (painettu)978-3-030-69881-2
DOI - pysyväislinkit
TilaJulkaistu - kesäk. 2021
OKM-julkaisutyyppiA3 Kirjan tai muun kokoomateoksen osa

Julkaisusarja

NimiPalgrave Studies in the History of Experience
KustantajaPalgrave Macmillan
ISSN (painettu)2524-8960
ISSN (elektroninen)2524-8979

Julkaisufoorumi-taso

  • Jufo-taso 3

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