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Drumming Asian America: Performing Race, Gender, and Sexuality in North American Taiko.

机译:击鼓的亚裔美国人:在北美太鼓表演种族,性别和性行为。

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摘要

Taiko is a highly physical and theatrical form of ensemble drumming that was popularized in 1950s Japan and has been widely practiced in Japanese American and other Asian American communities since the late 1960s. Taiko's visual and sonic largesse---outstretched limbs and thundering drums---contrasted with pervasive stereotypes of Asians as silent and passive. This dissertation uses ethnographic participant-observation, archival research, and performance analysis to examine how North American taiko performance produces and is produced by the shifting contours of racial, gender, and sexual identity and community. Taiko groups create, re-shape, and challenge familiar notions of Asia, America, and Asian America through their public performances and in their rehearsal processes. While sometimes implicated in Orientalist performance contexts, taiko players use performance strategically to commemorate Asian American history, to convey feelings of empowerment, and to invite feminist, anti-racist, and queer forms of spectatorship.;This dissertation explores taiko's roots in the Asian American Movement of the 1960s and 1970s, its implications for 1990s multiculturalism, as well as its intersections with contemporary queer communities. My analysis focuses on three case study groups whose origins, philosophies, and geographic locations offer a diverse view of North American taiko and the Asian American/Canadian communities with which they are associated. Chapter One considers how San Jose Taiko's early articulation of their identity as an Asian American taiko group continues to influence its practices and performances, particularly their taiko-dance piece, "Ei Ja Nai Ka?" and their national tours. Chapter Two examines how Minneapolis-based Mu Daiko negotiates its members' diverse racial, ethnic, and gender identities within a Midwestern context that values multiculturalism. Chapter Three considers how the all-women's group Jodaiko conveys Asian American lesbian identity and invites queer spectatorship through theatrical performance choices and its members' everyday gender performances. My analysis extends from my ethnographic participant-observation, which includes personal interviews, attendance at workshops and performances, and spending time with performers; archival research in formal collections, groups' internal documents, and my personal archive of taiko programs, posters, photographs, DVDs, and other ephemera; and performance analysis that is informed by my twelve years of experience as a taiko performer.
机译:太鼓是一种高度物理和戏剧性的合奏击鼓形式,自1950年代日本开始流行,自1960年代后期以来在日裔美国人和其他亚裔美国人社区中得到了广泛的实践。太鼓的视觉和声音慷慨-伸出的四肢和打雷的鼓-与亚洲人普遍的刻板印象形成沉默和被动。本论文利用人种学参与者的观察,档案研究和绩效分析来考察北美太鼓表演如何产生以及种族,性别,性身份和社区轮廓的变化。太鼓乐队通过公开表演和彩排,创造,重塑和挑战亚洲,美洲和亚裔美国人熟悉的概念。尽管有时牵涉到东方主义者的表演背景,但太极拳手从战略上利用表演来纪念亚裔美国人的历史,传达权力的感觉,并邀请女权主义,反种族主义和奇怪的观众形式。 1960年代和1970年代的运动及其对1990年代多元文化主义的影响,以及与当代酷儿社区的交集。我的分析集中在三个案例研究小组,这些小组的起源,哲学和地理位置为他们提供了与北美太鼓以及与之相关的亚裔美国人/加拿大社区的不同观点。第一章考虑了圣何塞太鼓早期如何表达其作为亚裔太极拳团体的身份,如何继续影响其行为和表演,尤其是他们的太极舞作品“ Ei Ja Nai Ka”?和他们的全国巡演。第二章探讨了位于明尼阿波利斯的Mu Daiko如何在重视多元文化主义的中西部背景下,协商其成员的不同种族,族裔和性别认同。第三章探讨了由妇女团体Jodaiko传达的亚裔美国女同性恋身份,并通过戏剧表演选择及其成员的日常性别表演来邀请酷儿观众。我的分析来自我的民族志参与者观察,包括个人访谈,参加研讨会和表演以及与表演者共度时光。对正式馆藏,团体内部文件以及我对太鼓节目,海报,照片,DVD和其他临时物品的个人档案的档案研究;以及我作为太鼓表演者十二年的经验所提供的性能分析。

著录项

  • 作者

    Ahlgren, Angela Kristine.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Texas at Austin.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Texas at Austin.;
  • 学科 Asian American Studies.;Gender Studies.;Theater History.;Music.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 231 p.
  • 总页数 231
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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