Carla J. Maier is a Marie Curie Research Fellow at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Carla J. Maier has not only written a strong study on sound's importance for the notion of 'culture' and how it can be analyzed also in a non-representational way, but has done so in and as a series of interrelated arguments – sound studies, sonic fictions – that draw on practices, narratives and politics that relate the specific field of this study – British Asian Dance Music – to the larger field of aesthetics and 'the postcolonial condition'. This is an immensely ambitious and valuable project – and also a 'toolkit' for artists, educators and activists (almost calling for but also forging a 'conglomerate-type' of these three “professions”). A wonderful book! * Bernd Herzogenrath, Professor of American Studies, University of Frankfurt, Germany, and editor of Sonic Thinking: A Media Philosophical Approach (Bloomsbury, 2017) * While paying due attention to postcolonial and cultural studies of new ethnicities and political positions, Carla J. Maier's insights into British South Asian music shift the emphasis to the 'transcultural fabric' of sounds. This book brings sound studies and digital technologies more concertedly into the mix, reminding us that musical sounds and techniques are key agents in cultural transformation and the decolonization of everyday life. * Nabeel Zuberi, Associate Professor in Media and Communication, University of Auckland, New Zealand, author of Sounds English: Transnational Popular Music (2001) and co-editor, with Jon Stratton, of Black Popular Music in Britain since 1945 (2014) * This is a highly original and exciting study of some of the key figures who have defined South Asian musics in Britain. As much as that music was defined by its exciting 'fusions' (a word many of the artists disowned), this book treads a similar radical path, mixing sound studies, cultural studies and sociological approaches to popular music. This will appeal to anyone interested in British South Asian experience, and more broadly, to those interested in how sound itself articulates political and cultural identities. * Anamik Saha, Senior Lecturer in Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK, and author of Race and the Cultural Industries (2018) *