
Musical Minorities is the first English-language monograph on the performing arts of an ethnic minority in Vietnam. Living primarily in the northern mountains, the Hmong have strategically maintained their cultural distance from foreign invaders and encroaching state agencies for almost two centuries. They use cultural heritage as a means of maintaining a resilient community identity, one which is malleable to their everyday needs and to negotiations among themselves and with others in the vicinity. Case studies of revolutionary songs, countercultural rock, traditional vocal and instrumental styles, tourist shows, animist and Christian rituals, and light pop from the diaspora illustrate the diversity of their creative outputs.This groundbreaking study reveals how performing arts shape understandings of ethnicity and nationality in contemporary Vietnam. Based on three years of fieldwork, Lonán Ó Briain traces the circulation of organized sounds that contribute to the adaptive capacities of this diverse social group. In an original investigation of the sonic materialization of social identity, the book outlines the full multiplicity of Hmong music-making through a fascinating account of music, minorities, and the state in a post-socialist context.
This book investigates how the Hmong people in northern Vietnam utilize performing arts as a strategic mechanism to maintain community identity and navigate relationships with the state. Lonán Ó Briain, an ethnomusicologist, draws upon three years of intensive ethnographic fieldwork to analyze the sonic expressions of the Hmong. He argues that music serves as a flexible, adaptive tool for social cohesion in a post-socialist context, allowing the group to assert their ethnicity amidst external political pressures.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of ethnic identity and performance in Southeast Asia. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the high level of detail provided in the ethnographic case studies.
Page Count:
234
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190626968
ISBN-13:
9780190626969
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!