9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf

Chapter 11, “Popularizing ‘Americanness,’” analyzes how The Halluci Nation’s 2016 award-winning music video, “Stadium Pow Wow,” challenges dominant pop culture discourses in powerful ways. The Halluci Nation are a DJ collective—composed of First Nations artists—who have created an innovative musical...

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Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Davenport, J.
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Taylor & Francis 2023
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://www.routledge.com/Dance-in-US-Popular-Culture/Atkins/p/book/9780367819842
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-640022023-07-20T02:48:37Z Chapter 11 Popularizing "American-ness" Blu Wakpa, Tria Davenport, J. Guyton, Jeremy Leon, Anna Simone, Teresa London Waringer, Laura cultural studies; dance; dance studies; dance history; dance theory; gender; identity; movement analysis; performance; theatre; popular culture; USA bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AS Dance & other performing arts Chapter 11, “Popularizing ‘Americanness,’” analyzes how The Halluci Nation’s 2016 award-winning music video, “Stadium Pow Wow,” challenges dominant pop culture discourses in powerful ways. The Halluci Nation are a DJ collective—composed of First Nations artists—who have created an innovative musical style. To date, “Stadium Pow Wow” has garnered over 7.9 million views on YouTube. Contemporary “American” mainstream—that is, settler colonial—pop culture discourses frequently exclude Native Americans and their practices and/or relegate them to a historic past. Such structural exclusion of Indigenous peoples produces detrimental, material consequences. This chapter focuses on what insights can be gleaned from considering the connectedness of the disparate movement modalities depicted in the music video, which include Grass Dance, Hoop Dance, skateboarding, protest, boxing, and play. Interviews with three practitioners in the film who are prominently featured—Adrian Primeaux, Joe Buffalo, and Kenzie Wilson—inform this chapter in important ways. This chapter argues that “Stadium Pow Wow” expands dominant pop culture discourses by (1) making visible contemporary Native people, practitioners, and lands, challenging patriarchal gender norms and (2) articulating human-to-human and more-than-human linkages in the past and present to bring an Indigenous future into being. 2023-07-19T11:02:51Z 2023-07-19T11:02:51Z 2024 chapter 9780367819729 9780367819842 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/64002 eng application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf https://www.routledge.com/Dance-in-US-Popular-Culture/Atkins/p/book/9780367819842 Taylor & Francis Dance in US Popular Culture Routledge 10.4324/9781003011170-15 10.4324/9781003011170-15 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 4b21f998-8ace-4910-ba56-67edab2ada81 9780367819729 9780367819842 Routledge 35 open access
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description Chapter 11, “Popularizing ‘Americanness,’” analyzes how The Halluci Nation’s 2016 award-winning music video, “Stadium Pow Wow,” challenges dominant pop culture discourses in powerful ways. The Halluci Nation are a DJ collective—composed of First Nations artists—who have created an innovative musical style. To date, “Stadium Pow Wow” has garnered over 7.9 million views on YouTube. Contemporary “American” mainstream—that is, settler colonial—pop culture discourses frequently exclude Native Americans and their practices and/or relegate them to a historic past. Such structural exclusion of Indigenous peoples produces detrimental, material consequences. This chapter focuses on what insights can be gleaned from considering the connectedness of the disparate movement modalities depicted in the music video, which include Grass Dance, Hoop Dance, skateboarding, protest, boxing, and play. Interviews with three practitioners in the film who are prominently featured—Adrian Primeaux, Joe Buffalo, and Kenzie Wilson—inform this chapter in important ways. This chapter argues that “Stadium Pow Wow” expands dominant pop culture discourses by (1) making visible contemporary Native people, practitioners, and lands, challenging patriarchal gender norms and (2) articulating human-to-human and more-than-human linkages in the past and present to bring an Indigenous future into being.
author2 Davenport, J.
author_facet Davenport, J.
title 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
spellingShingle 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
title_short 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
title_full 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
title_fullStr 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
title_sort 9781003011170_10.4324_9781003011170-15.pdf
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2023
url https://www.routledge.com/Dance-in-US-Popular-Culture/Atkins/p/book/9780367819842
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