Home Artists Posts Import Register

Downloads

Content

For this episode we welcome academic and DJ Larisa Kingston Mann from Temple University in Philadelphia, whose work analyzes the relationship between law, technology, sovereignty and creativity, especially focusing on the ways changing media technologies affect communities’ ability to flourish

Her PhD thesis “Rude Citizenship”, soon to be turned into a book, looks at the ways in which Jamaican popular music practices challenge the colonial underpinnings of copyright law and of sovereignty itself. We discuss the economics of Jamaican sound system culture, the sticky topic of copyright as a flawed protection for creators, and proposals for a fairer DJ economy.

We had a few sound issues that we tried to clean up for this episode, and Larissa is a generous and fun guest. I hope you enjoy it and are having a great week!

Thanks again for the support :)

On Larisa's recommendation, we donated to support The Attic Youth Center in Philly. The Attic Youth Center is the only organization in Philadelphia exclusively serving lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) youth. https://www.atticyouthcenter.org/

Links

Sonic Publics Booming at the Margins: Ethnic Radio, Intimacy, and Nonlinear Innovation in Mediahttps://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/8591

White Faces in Intimate Spaces: Jamaican Popular Music in Global Circulationhttps://academic.oup.com/ccc/article-abstract/9/2/266/3979315


Files

Comments

Anonymous

This is a conversation that I’ll be referencing for a long time. Larisa articulates so well the complicated nature that I feel most artists face (or choose not to face) when dealing with the economic and historical realities of culture generally. Gonna have to pick up Rude Citizenship. Thank you for this!