Performing folklore: ranchos folclâoricos from Lisbon to Newark
(2005)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Indiana University Press : Made available through hoopla, 2005
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9780253027733 (electronic bk.) MWT11803456, 025302773X (electronic bk.) 11803456
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Through the lens of expressive culture, Performing Folklore tracks Portugal's transition from fascism to democracy, and from imperial metropole to EEC member state. Kimberly DaCosta Holton examines the evolution and significance of ranchos folclóricos, groups of amateur musicians and dancers who perform turn-of-the-century popular tradition and have acted as cultural barometers of change throughout 20th-century Portugal. She investigates the role that these folklore groups played in the mid-twentieth-century dictatorship, how they fell out of official favor with the advent of democracy, and why they remain so popular in Portugal's post-authoritarian state, especially in emigrant and diasporic communities. Holton looks at music, dance, costume, repertoire, venue, and social interplay in both local and global contexts. She considers the importance of revivalist folklore in the construction and preservation of national identity in the face of globalization. This book embraces "invented tradition" as process rather than event, presenting an ethnography not only of folkloric revivalism but also of sweeping cultural transformation, promoted alternately by authoritarianism, democracy, emigration, and European unification

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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