Nation-states, transnational corporations and cosmopolitans in the global popular music economy

Negus, Keith. 2019. Nation-states, transnational corporations and cosmopolitans in the global popular music economy. Global Media and China, 4(4), pp. 403-418. ISSN 2059-4364 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

This article assesses changing debates about globalisation in light of the growth of digital media. It stresses how popular music is shaped by enduring tensions between nation-state attempts to control territorial borders, the power of transnational corporations aiming to operate across these borders, and emergent cosmopolitan practices that offer a cultural challenge to these borders. It outlines how popular music is influenced by physical place and highlights the cultural and political importance of the nation-state for understanding the context within which musical creativity occurs. It explains how transnational corporations use financial power to work across and to gain entry to national boundaries, and assesses claims that cosmopolitanism musical encounters offer more inclusive and alternative spaces to that of bounded state control and unbounded capitalist competition. It concludes by arguing for a more music centred approach to the powers and pluralisms through which popular music moves at the meeting of states, corporations and cosmopolitans.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1177/2059436419867738

Keywords:

transnational corporations, nation-state, popular music, musicians, digital music industries, cosmopolitanism

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Music > Popular Music Research Unit

Dates:

DateEvent
2 July 2019Accepted
13 August 2019Published Online
1 December 2019Published

Item ID:

26617

Date Deposited:

16 Jul 2019 09:53

Last Modified:

14 Jun 2021 19:58

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/26617

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