Ouyang, Lei X. 2022. Music as Mao’s Weapon: Remembering the Cultural Revolution.
PDF

How to Cite

Cheung, B. H. C. (2023). Ouyang, Lei X. 2022. Music as Mao’s Weapon: Remembering the Cultural Revolution. MUSICultures, 50, 301–303. Retrieved from https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/MC/article/view/33738
PDF

References

Clark, Paul, Laikwan Pang, and Tsanhuang Tsai, eds. 2016. Listening to China’s Cultural Revolution: Music, Politics, and Cultural Continuities. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Daughtry, Martin. 2015. Listening to War: Sound, Music, Trauma, and Survival in Wartime Iraq. New York: Oxford University Press.

Gilman, Lisa. 2016. My Music, My War: The Listening Habits of U.S. Troops in raq and Afghanistan. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.

McDougall, Bonnie S. 1984. Popular Chinese Literature and Performing Arts in the People’s Republic of China, 1949–1976. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  • The author retains copyright over the work.
  • The author grants the journal owner (The Canadian Society for Traditional Music / La Société canadienne pour les traditions musicales) an exclusive license to publish the work.
  • The author may post a pre-print or post-print version of the work (see definitions below) on a personal website for up to twelve months after the work is published in MUSICultures. After twelve months, the pre-print version must be replaced with the published version.
  • The author may deposit the published PDF of the work in a non-commercial online repository twelve months after the work is published in MUSICultures, or any time thereafter.
  • Any such deposit must include a link to the work on the MUSICultures website, e.g., https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/MC/article/view/19996

A pre-print is a work-in-progress—a contribution not yet accepted, or perhaps even submitted, to MUSICultures.

A post-print is the version of a contribution after peer review and acceptance by MUSICultures, with revisions completed.

The published version is the PDF file of a contribution as it appears in MUSICultures.

Please note that academia.edu and ResearchGate.com are both for-profit repositories; authors may not deposit the published PDF of the work in these repositories until after the journal’s embargo period.

For permission to reprint or translate material from MUSICultures, please contact Heather Sparling, General Editor of MUSICultures (heather_sparling@cbu.ca).