Levi S. Gibbs is an associate professor of Asian societies, cultures, and languages at Dartmouth College. He is the author of Song King: Connecting People, Places, and Past in Contemporary China and the editor of Faces of Tradition in Chinese Performing Arts.
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Acknowledgments Introduction: The Cultural Politics of Singers Levi S. Gibbs Part I. The Politics of Authenticity and Iconicity Introduction Jeff Todd Titon 1. Becoming a "Folk" Icon: Pete Seeger and Musical Activism Anthony Seeger 2. An Ordinary Icon: Cassettes, Counternarratives, and Shaykh Imam Andrew Simon 3. Idolatry and Iconoclasm in K-Pop Fandom John Lie Part II. Race, Gender, Ethnicity, and Class Introduction Eric Lott 4. All On They Mouth Like Liquor Treva B. Lindsey 5. Compromise and Competition: The Musical Identities of Afro-Cuban Women SingersChristina D. Abreu 6. Challenging the Divide Between Elite and Mass Cultures: Opera Icon Beverly Sills Nancy Guy Part III. Multiplicities of Representations Introduction Ruth Hellier 7. Artful Politics of the Voice: "Queen of Romani Music" Esma Redzepova Carol Silverman 8. Teresa Teng: Embodying Asia's Cold WarsMichael K. Bourdaghs 9. Women, Political Voice, and the South African Diaspora, 1959-2020 Carol A. Muller Part IV. Singers and Songs as Interweaving Narratives Introduction Kwame Dawes 10. The Vocal Narratives of Lata Mangeshkar: Gender, Politics, and Nation in India Natalie Sarrazin 11. Ya Toyour: One Song in Two Voices Katherine Meizel Afterword: The Power of Song Elijah Wald Contributors Index
"Social Voices resounds with memorable, personal, and prophetic stories of how singers shape our worlds. An expansive, versatile, and mind-opening volume."--William Cheng, author of Queering the Field: Sounding Out Ethnomusicology