流行文化与现代战争

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 Q3 HISTORY
A. Abra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这个参考书目包括历史,探索多种意义和目的,流行文化已经在战时拥有。流行文化为士兵和平民提供娱乐和逃避现实,同时也允许他们想象和表达他们的战时身份,以及社会和政治世界。军队接受歌曲或运动来娱乐,但也训练和调理他们的部队。在国内,它通常是在电影屏幕上或舞池中,或在音乐厅或棒球比赛中,关于阶级,种族,性别,性取向,民族和国家的关键问题被反映,体验和辩论。流行文化也是官方和非官方宣传的有力手段,可以提供抵抗独裁主义或占领的手段,也可以提供从战争中恢复的途径。参考书目采用了“流行文化”的广义定义,消除了社会和历史构建的“高级”和“低级”文化之间的区别,以考虑在战时娱乐和塑造个人和社会经验的广泛休闲形式和表演艺术。重点主要放在流行文化形式上,这些文化形式在生产者和消费者、表演者和观众之间具有互动或技术驱动的关系,因此参考书目不涉及文学或视觉艺术,它们各自有自己的学科专家和大量的学术文献。参考书目也只关注战争或战争期间产生的流行文化,而不是作为个人或集体记忆的回顾性表达的一部分。从时间上看,它关注的是全面战争及以后的时代,包括第一次世界大战、第二次世界大战、冷战和非殖民化,以及9/11后在阿富汗和伊拉克的战争。值得注意的是,在20世纪初几乎完全相同的时刻,战争和流行文化都以关键的方式发展和现代化。第一次世界大战爆发时,爵士时代刚刚站稳脚跟;文化传播新技术出现,围绕音乐、电影、舞蹈、戏剧、体育和一系列其他文化形式的跨国商业休闲产业呈指数级增长。这个参考书目中的作品关注的是随后发生的事情,以及战争和流行文化交织在一起的现代性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Popular Culture and Modern War
This bibliography includes histories that explore the manifold meanings and purposes that popular culture has possessed in wartime. Popular culture provides entertainment and escapism for soldiers and civilians, while also allowing them to imagine and give expression to their wartime identities, and social and political worlds. Militaries embrace song or sport to entertain, but also to train and condition their troops. On the home front, it is often on the movie screen or the dance floor, or at the concert hall or the baseball game, where critical issues about class, race, gender, sexuality, ethnicity and nation are reflected, experienced, and debated. Popular culture also serves as a potent means of official and unofficial propaganda, and can offer a means of resistance against authoritarianism or occupation, or a pathway toward recovery from war. The bibliography adopts a broad definition of “popular culture,” which eliminates socially and historically constructed distinctions between “high” and “low” cultures, to consider the wide range of leisure forms and performing arts that entertained and shaped the experience of individuals and societies in wartime. The focus is primarily on popular cultural forms that possess an interactive or technologically-driven relationship between producer and consumer, or performer and audience, and so the bibliography does not deal with literature or the visual arts, which each have their own disciplinary specialists and immense scholarly literatures. The bibliography is also only concerned with popular culture produced during the war or wars in question, rather than as part of the retrospective articulation of individual or collective memory. Temporally, it is focused on the era of total war and beyond, including World War I, World War II, the Cold War and decolonization, and the post-9/11 wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Significantly, at almost precisely the same moment in the early 20th century, warfare and popular culture both evolved and modernized in critical ways. The First World War erupted just as the Jazz Age took hold; new technologies for cultural dissemination emerged, and the transnational commercial leisure industries surrounding music, film, dance, theater, sport and a range of other cultural forms expanded exponentially. Works in this bibliography are concerned with what followed, and the intertwined modernities of both war and popular culture.
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