“Entertaining” the Notion of Change: The Transformative Power of Performance in Argentine Pop

Authors

  • Mara Favoretto University of Melbourne
  • Timothy D. Wilson University of Alaska Fairbanks

Abstract

 

All music can be used to create meaning and identity, but music born in a repressive political environment, in which freedom is lacking, changes the dynamic and actually facilitates that creation of meaning. This article explores some practices of protest related to pop music under dictatorship, specifically the Argentine military dictatorship of 1976-83, and what happens once their raison d’ệtre, the repressive regime, is removed. We examine pre- and post-dictatorship music styles in recent Argentine pop: rock in the 1970s-80s and the current cumbia villera culture, in order to shed light on the relative roles of politics, economy and culture in the creation of pop music identity. Timothy Wilson is Assistant Professor of Spanish literature at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. He is known for his work on Argentine rock music and dictatorship, and his research interests are in the areas of government-sponsored terror and popular cultures of resistance. Mara Favoretto is a Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. She specialises in contemporary popular music and cultural expressions of resistance in Latin American society.

 

Author Biographies

Mara Favoretto, University of Melbourne

Dr. Mara Favoretto is a Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. She specializes in contemporary popular music and lyrics response as counter discourse in cultural crisis. Her research interests include rhetorical tropes used to encode subversive messages under constrains of censorship and cultural expressions of resistance in Latin American society.

Timothy D. Wilson, University of Alaska Fairbanks

Timothy D. Wilson is an Assistant Professor of Spanish at the University of Alaska Fairbanks whose work centers on music and identity in Latin America.  Doctor Wilson is known for his work on Argentine rock music and dictatorship, and his research interests in cultural studies are in the areas of government-sponsored terror and popular cultures of resistance.  He can be reached at tim.wilson@alaska.edu.

 

 


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Published

2010-10-27

How to Cite

Favoretto, M., & Wilson, T. D. (2010). “Entertaining” the Notion of Change: The Transformative Power of Performance in Argentine Pop. Popular Entertainment Studies, 1(2), 44–60. Retrieved from https://novaojs.newcastle.edu.au/kulumun/index.php/pes/article/view/17

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Articles