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The Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) is more than a musical event that ostensibly unites European people through music. It is a spectacle: a performative event that allegorically represents the idea of Europe. Since its beginning in the Cold War era, the contest has functioned as a symbolic realm for the performance of European selves and the negotiation of European identities. Through the ESC, Europe is experienced, felt, and imagined in singing and dancing as the interplay of tropes of being local and/or European is enacted.In Empire of Song: Europe and Nation in the Eurovision Song Contest, contributors interpret the ESC as a musical mediascape and mega-event that has variously performed and performs the changing visions of the European project. Through the study of the cultural politics of the ESC, contributors discuss the ways in which music operates as a dynamic nexus for making national identities and European sensibilities, generating processes of assimilation or integration, and defining the celebrated notion of the European citizen in a global context. Scholars in the volume also explore the ways otherness and difference are produced, spectacularized, challenged, or even neglected in the televised musical realities of the ESC. For the contributing authors, song serves as a site for constituting Europe and the nation, on- and offstage. History and politics, as well as the constant production of European subjectivities, are sounded in song. The Eurovision song is a shifting realm where old and new states imagine their pasts, question their presents, and envision ideal futures in the New Europe.Essays in Empire of Song adopt theoretical and epistemological orientations in their exploration of popular music within ethnomusicology and critical musicology, questioning the idea of Europe and the nation through and in music, at a time when the European self appears more fragmented, if not entirely shattered. Bringing together ethnomusicology, mu
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