Ethnographic Explorations of the Impacts of COVID-19 on Sociality and Spatiality in a Swiss Live Music Venue

IF 0.2 0 MUSIC
J. Gligorijevic
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The globally experienced suspension of cultural life brought about by the COVID-19 crisis has been duly acknowledged and discussed in a growing number of publications, reports and online seminars, most often in terms of the impact of COVID-19 on the music/culture industry. Despite the worsening pandemic situation in Switzerland and elsewhere during the autumn of 2020, I happened to be conducting field research in the city of St. Gallen (in north-eastern Switzerland) where the authorities opted for a “liberal” handling of the health crisis. As a result, the city’s live music venue “Palace”, where I was doing my fieldwork observations, remained open to the public as late as mid-December 2020, albeit with shortened opening hours and with a dancing ban. This allowed me to gain first-hand fieldwork experience during the pandemic’s significant constraints on social behaviour. The present article accordingly addresses the ethical dilemmas that I encountered when operating in this “grey zone” of field research, while also documenting the challenges and adjustments that the Palace venue had to undergo during pandemic times from the perspectives of producers, musicians and audiences alike. The article specifically focuses on understanding and analysing changes in the experience of the Palace’s sociality and spatiality under social distancing rules. Ultimately, this work provides a different angle on the existing body of music-cultural research, which largely focuses on the cancellations and transformations of music events into virtual gatherings.
2019冠状病毒病对瑞士现场音乐场所社会性和空间性影响的民族志探索
在越来越多的出版物、报告和在线研讨会上,人们充分认识和讨论了新冠肺炎危机给全球带来的文化生活中断,其中最常见的是新冠肺炎对音乐/文化产业的影响。尽管2020年秋季瑞士和其他地方的疫情不断恶化,但我碰巧在圣加仑市(瑞士东北部)进行实地研究,那里的当局选择了“自由”处理卫生危机。因此,直到2020年12月中旬,我正在进行实地考察的该市现场音乐场地“宫殿”(Palace)仍对公众开放,尽管开放时间缩短了,而且禁止跳舞。这使我在疫情严重制约社会行为期间获得了第一手的实地工作经验。因此,本文阐述了我在实地研究的“灰色地带”中遇到的道德困境,同时也从制作人、音乐家和观众的角度记录了在大流行时期宫殿场地必须经历的挑战和调整。本文着重于理解和分析在社会距离规则下故宫的社会性和空间性体验的变化。最终,这项工作为现有的音乐文化研究提供了一个不同的角度,主要关注音乐活动的取消和转变为虚拟聚会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Journal of World Popular Music is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes research and scholarship on recent issues and debates surrounding international popular musics, also known as World Music, Global Pop, World Beat or, more recently, World Music 2.0. The journal provides a forum to explore the manifestations and impacts of post-globalizing trends, processes, and dynamics surrounding these musics today. It adopts an open-minded perspective, including in its scope any local popularized musics of the world, commercially available music of non-Western origin, musics of ethnic minorities, and contemporary fusions or collaborations with local ‘traditional’ or ‘roots’ musics with Western pop and rock musics. Placing specific emphasis on contemporary, interdisciplinary, and international perspectives, the journal’s special features include empirical research and scholarship into the global creative and music industries, the participants of World Music, the musics themselves and their representations in all media forms today, among other relevant themes and issues; alongside explorations of recent ideas and perspectives from popular music, ethnomusicology, anthropology, musicology, communication, media and cultural studies, sociology, geography, art and museum studies, and other fields with a scholarly focus on World Music. The journal also features special, guest-edited issues that bring together contributions under a unifying theme or geographical area.
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