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Above and below the streets: A musical geography of anti-nuclear protest in Tokyo
Affiliation:1. School of Science, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai, Thailand;2. Laboratory of Molecular and Evolutionary Parasitology, RAPID group, School of Biosciences, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, UK;3. School of Health Science, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai, Thailand;4. Human Gut Microbiome for Health Research Unit, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai, Thailand;1. Centro de Investigaciones en Geografía Ambiental, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Antigua Carretera a Pátzcuaro 8701, CP 58190 Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico;2. Institute for Natural Resources, Environment and Society (LYY), University of Eastern Finland, Joensuu, Finland
Abstract:Affects such as anger, fear and love have compelled Tokyoites to take to the streets in protest in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster of March 2011. One of the characteristic forms these protests have taken has been the anti-nuclear “sound demonstrations” in which bands, DJs and rappers perform from the backs of trucks that lead demonstrators through the streets. Projecting their emotive music through urban space with the aid of powerful sound systems, these demonstrations disrupt the everyday noises of the neoliberal city and create a public space for the vocalisation of dissent. After the demonstrations, these same artists and demonstrators move to the underground live houses and social centres that constitute a subterranean backbone to the visible demonstrations in the street. Expressing emotions through musical protest is a powerful motor for what Stevphen Shukatitis has called affective composition, the process via which collective political subjectivities are formed through the expression of shared emotions. This paper outlines the emotional geography of anti-nuclear music in post-Fukushima Tokyo. It examines the dynamic interplay between aboveground political protest and the city's subterranean network of musical performance spaces.
Keywords:Japan  Affect  Music  Space  Protest  Emotion
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