Remaking Culture and Music Spaces: Affects, Infrastructures, Futures
- Editor: Berkers, Pauwke
- Editor: Dillane, Aileen
- Editor: Golemo, Karolina
- Editor: Haynes, Jo
- Editor: Woodward, Ian
Book
$174.75Printed on demand
Contents
- Introduction: Making sense of culture and music space during and beyond the pandemic
- Part I: Affects
- 1. Festival atmospheres: social, spatial, and material explorations of physically distanced festivals
- 2. How live is live? COVID-19, live music and online performances
- 3. 'Like a winter without Christmas': Interaction rituals and the disruption of the Roskilde Festival
- Part II: Infrastructures
- 4. Curating listening: The cultural production of a (commercial) experience
- 5. Reconceiving spatiality and value in the live music industries in response to COVID-19
- 6. Out of office: The broader implications of changing spaces and places in arts-based work during the COVID-19 pandemic
- 7. The sounds of silence: Concerts, musicians, and the COVID-19 pandemic
- 8. Self-organisation in musicians' collective workspaces before, during and after COVID-19: A model for moving forward?
- Part III: Spaces
- 9. A sonic paradise in the countryside: Pop-rock festivals as drivers of creative tourism development in small cities and rural areas in the post-pandemic era
- 10. Refiguring pathologised festival spaces: Governance, risk and creativity
- 11. Experimenting with adulthood in the time of pandemic: The 18th edition of the Sacrum Profanum festival in Cracow
- 12. The island of freedom on the Vltava
- 13. The moral complexity of organising a civically engaged festival during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Part IV: Futures
- 14. Unknown futures: Towards a more resilient Dutch popular music sector
- 15. At the juncture of the liminal and the neo-liberal: Can the smaller, independent commercial music festival survive into the future?
- 16. Regions in recovery? The significance of festivals for regenerating and reimagining regional community life
- 17. Music missionaries: How Dutch music festivals utilised the pandemic to bounce forward