BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY

This article addresses the issue of hybridity as one manifested in the everyday experiences of migrant Filipino musicians in Hong Kong, with a particular emphasis on their differences in a dialectic of the self and other as mobilised in performance, and, as a continuum woven into their racial colour...

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Main Author: Lee William Watkins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Philippines 2010-06-01
Series:Humanities Diliman
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/1613
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spelling doaj-3b63e9dca08443088c0c45d05462e5072020-11-24T21:34:21ZengUniversity of the PhilippinesHumanities Diliman1655-15322010-06-01715884BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITYLee William WatkinsThis article addresses the issue of hybridity as one manifested in the everyday experiences of migrant Filipino musicians in Hong Kong, with a particular emphasis on their differences in a dialectic of the self and other as mobilised in performance, and, as a continuum woven into their racial colour and various social statuses. Where hybridity in music is the concern, most studies focus on hybridity as a matter of aesthetics, while in nonmusical areas, hybridity is addressed in the context of the relationship between colonized and colonizer during western imperialism, and between migrant and host in the contemporary age. This article combines these two areas: it will briefly include, but also move beyond the concern with aesthetics and propose hybridity through the cultural analysis of musical performance more as a form of social action resulting from colonialism, neocolonialism and transnationalism.http://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/1613ColourHong Kongimperialismmusicianshiptransnationalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lee William Watkins
spellingShingle Lee William Watkins
BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
Humanities Diliman
Colour
Hong Kong
imperialism
musicianship
transnationalism
author_facet Lee William Watkins
author_sort Lee William Watkins
title BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
title_short BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
title_full BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
title_fullStr BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
title_full_unstemmed BROWN, BLACK, YELLOW, WHITE: FILIPINO MUSICIANSHIP IN HONG KONG AND THEIR HYBRIDIZED SOCIABILITY
title_sort brown, black, yellow, white: filipino musicianship in hong kong and their hybridized sociability
publisher University of the Philippines
series Humanities Diliman
issn 1655-1532
publishDate 2010-06-01
description This article addresses the issue of hybridity as one manifested in the everyday experiences of migrant Filipino musicians in Hong Kong, with a particular emphasis on their differences in a dialectic of the self and other as mobilised in performance, and, as a continuum woven into their racial colour and various social statuses. Where hybridity in music is the concern, most studies focus on hybridity as a matter of aesthetics, while in nonmusical areas, hybridity is addressed in the context of the relationship between colonized and colonizer during western imperialism, and between migrant and host in the contemporary age. This article combines these two areas: it will briefly include, but also move beyond the concern with aesthetics and propose hybridity through the cultural analysis of musical performance more as a form of social action resulting from colonialism, neocolonialism and transnationalism.
topic Colour
Hong Kong
imperialism
musicianship
transnationalism
url http://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/1613
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