Louder and Faster
Pain, Joy, and the Body Politic in Asian American Taiko

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Author(s)
Wong, Deborah
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Language
EnglishAbstract
Louder and Faster is a study of taiko in California, focused on the play of sound, performance, identity, ethnicity, race, gender, and politics. Wong explores taiko as a music/dance art form that creates spaces in which memories of the WW2 Japanese American incarceration, Asian American identity, and a desire to be seen/heard intersect with global capitalism, the complications of mediation, and legacies of imperialism. Based on two decades of participatory ethnographic work, the book offers a vivid glimpse of an Asian American presence both loud and fragile.
Keywords
Japanese American; Asian American; taiko; music; dance; California; Los Angeles; Buddhism; social movementsISBN
9780520304529Publisher
University of California PressPublisher website
www.ucpress.eduPublication date and place
Oakland, 2019Classification
Music
Society & social sciences

