Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T02:53:51.057Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Postcolonialism on the make: the music of John Mellencamp, David Bowie and John Zorn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

When we acknowledge that an idea, history or tradition is not ours, we distance ourselves from it. When we then proceed to use, incorporate or represent it, we arrogate the right to employ what we acknowledge as not ours. It is not something we do despite the foreignness of our subject; it is something we do because of our perception of it as other. The implicit hierarchical nature of otherness invites seemingly innocuous practices of representation that amount to (often unknowing) strategies of domination through appropriation. (Dominguez 1987, p. 132)

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barringer, F. 1991. ‘Immigration brings new diversity to Asian population in the US’, New York Times, 12 06Google Scholar
Bradby, B. 1990. ‘Do-talk and don't talk: the division of the subject in girl-group music’, in On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, ed. Frith, S. and Goodwin, A. (New York), pp. 341–68Google Scholar
Chuman, F. F. 1977. The Bamboo People: The Law and the Japanese-Americans (Del Mar, California)Google Scholar
Civil Rights Issues Facing Asian Americans in the 1990s. 1992. A Report of the United States Commission on Civil Rights (Washington)Google Scholar
Clifford, J. 1987. ‘Of other peoples: beyond the “salvage” paradigm’, in Discussions in Contemporary Culture, 1, ed. Foster, H. (Seattle), pp. 121–30Google Scholar
Clifford, J. 1988. The Predicament of Culture: Twentieth-Century Ethnography, Literature, and Art (Cambridge, Massachusetts)Google Scholar
Davis, F. 1991. ‘“Zorn” for “anger”: the composer John Zorn likes being the bad boy of new music’, The Atlantic, 01, pp. 97100Google Scholar
Dominguez, V. R. 1987. ‘Of other peoples: beyond the “salvage” paradigm’, in Discussions in Contemporary Culture, 1, ed. Foster, H. (Seattle), pp. 131–7Google Scholar
Hopkins, J. 1985. Bowie (New York)Google Scholar
Hwang, D. H. 1988. M. Butterfly (New York)Google Scholar
Jen, G. 1991. ‘Challenging the Asian illusion’, New York Times, 11 08Google Scholar
Kondo, D. 1990. ‘M. Butterfly: orientalism, gender, and a critique of essentialist identity’, Cultural Critique, 16, pp. 530CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krich, J. 1986. ‘Here come the brides: the blossoming business of imported love’, Mother Jones, 11:2, pp. 3446Google Scholar
Matsumoto, V. 1989. ‘Two deserts’, in The Forbidden Stitch: An Asian American Women's Anthology, ed. Lim, S. G., Tsutakawa, M. and Donnelly, M. (Corvallis, Oregon), pp. 4553Google Scholar
Mura, D. 1991. Turning Japanese: memoirs of a Sansei (New York)Google Scholar
Mydans, S. 1992. ‘Killing alarms Japanese-Americans’, New York Times, 26 02Google Scholar
Osumi, M. D. 1982. ‘Asians and California's anti-miscegenation laws’, in Asian and Pacific American Experiences: Women's Perspectives, ed. Tsuchida, N. (Minneapolis), pp. 137Google Scholar
Paik, I. 1971. ‘That Oriental feeling: a look at the caricatures of the Asians as sketched by American movies’, in Roots: An Asian American Reader, ed. Tachiki, A., Wong, E., Odo, F. and Wong, B. (Los Angeles), pp. 30–6Google Scholar
Pareles, J. 1991. ‘Sound bites from Asia (composer John Zorn's group “New Traditions in East Asian Bar Bands”)’, New York Times, 7 06Google Scholar
Rockwell, J. 1988. ‘As important as anyone in his generation’, New York Times, 21 02Google Scholar
Rockwell, J. 1991. ‘Evoking images of bars in Asian ports’, New York Times, 10 06Google Scholar
Said, E. W. 1978. Orientalism (New York)Google Scholar
Spivak, G. C. 1989. ‘Who claims alterity?’, in Discussions in Contemporary Culture, 4, ed. Kruger, B. and Mariani, P. (Seattle)Google Scholar
Takaki, R. 1989. Strangers from a Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans (Boston)Google Scholar
Trinh, T. M. 1989. Woman, Native, Other: Writing Postcoloniality and Feminism (Bloomington, Indiana)Google Scholar
Wallace, M. 1990a. ‘When black feminism faces the music, and the music is rap’, New York Times, 29 07Google Scholar
Wallace, M. 1990b. ‘Michael Jackson, black modernisms and the “ecstasy of communication”’, in Invisibility Blues: From Pop to Theory (London), pp. 7790Google Scholar
Watrous, P. 1989. ‘John Zorn takes over the town’, New York Times, 24 02Google Scholar
Wong, N. 1983. ‘When I was growing up’, in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, ed. Moraga, C. and Anzaldúa, G. (New York), pp. 78Google Scholar
Yoshimura, E. 1971. ‘G.I.'s and Asian Women’, in Roots: An Asian American Reader, ed. Tachiki, A., Wong, E., Odo, F. and Wong, B. (Los Angeles), pp. 27–9Google Scholar
Zorn, J. 1987. Liner notes to Spillane, Nonesuch, 9 79172–1Google Scholar