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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Licia Fiol-MattaPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.544kg ISBN: 9780822362821ISBN 10: 0822362821 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 03 February 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Introduction. I Am Nothing 1 1. Getting Off . . . the Nation 16 2. So What If She's Black? 67 3. Techne and the Lady 121 4. The Thinking Voice 172 Epilogue. Nothing Is Something 226 Notes 233 Bibliography 269 Index 279Reviews"""A welcome addition to the growing field of Latina/o sound studies. . . . [The Great Woman Singer] provides us with a guide to listen anew and in new ways."" -- Iván Ramos * Sounding Out! * ""Something resonates and pulses throughout Licia Fiol-Matta’s The Great Woman Singer. . . . Fiol-Matta’s attention to the gendering and racialization of the voice in Puerto Rican popular music makes crucial interventions within Latin American and Caribbean studies."" -- Summer Kim Lee * Women & Performance * “Privileging vocality, the sonic over the scopic, Fiol-Matta guides us through a series of questions the very performers spur as social subjects. She also provides a heuristic through which we might listen with more care to glean an understanding of the social web within which 'great’ cultural producers operate.” -- Leticia Alvarado * Latino Studies * ""This new book makes a number of important interventions into the gendered history of music and performance and, in the process, offers some new and potentially deeply influential formulations. . . . Fiol-Matta changes completely the way we read 'great female singers' but in the process she questions the value of 'greatness,' 'femaleness,' and 'singing.'"" -- Jack Halberstam * Current Musicology * ""An investigation that doesn’t refuse that wonder of childhood . . . The Great Woman Singer gives us the ample material evidence and imaginative know-how to extend women’s vocal influence to record all kinds of different stories."" -- Alexandra T. Vazquez * Current Musicology * ""Fiol-Matta models for us a mode of both listening and looking with deep care. . . . She expertly weaves the archival excavation of the lives and artistic output of each of the four figures in the book with a critical theorization of voice and gender, but she does this so seamlessly that we may fail initially to apprehend just how difficult this archival labor must have been."" -- Gayatri Gopinath * Current Musicology * “Rich in detail and theoretically sound . . . the paradigmatic nature of the biographies offered within makes Fiol Matta’s work vital not only to students of Puerto Rican music, but to scholars of Latin American and (non-Latina/o/x) US popular music as a whole."" -- María Elena Cepeda * Centro * ""The Great Woman Singer is a brilliant intervention in Puerto Rican studies that contributes to our knowledge about Puerto Rican culture through gender, voice, and music."" -- Frances R. Aparicio * Studies in Latin American Popular Culture * ""Popular music scholarship has sometimes shown a tendency to eschew cultural theory in favor of either archival heft, formal analysis, or colorful anecdote. In her work, Fiol-Matta defiantly bucks this trend, showing theoretical sophistication without abandoning either historiographical rigor or novel appeal."" -- Jason Borge * Revista de Estudios Hispanicos * ""Licia Fiol-Matta has written a marvelous exploration of the voice. In the process, she assembles a vocal archive of Puerto Rican performers whose labor is usually relegated to footnotes or cursory mentions. She demonstrates the ways these singers worked through, with and against the nothingness they were assigned."" -- Lorena Alvarado * Journal of Popular Music Studies *" In this book Licia Fiol-Matta brilliantly engages the complex politics that unfold in the performances, vocal nuances, lives, and times of four extraordinary Puerto Rican female pop singers. The intense 'thinking voice' in her writing re/sounds the conceptual density of the singers she investigates, whose complex figurations are primarily approached through a psychoanalytic study of the voice. Her detailed historical research and analytical incisiveness uncover the many crucibles of the vocal archive generating a rich acoustic tapestry that constitutes a remarkable transformation of feminist, queer, and colonial music scholarship. --Ana Maria Ochoa Gautier, author of <i>Aurality: Listening and Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century Colombia</i> Author InformationLicia Fiol-Matta teaches in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at New York University. She is the author of A Queer Mother for the Nation: The State and Gabriela Mistral. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |