周東美材
年報社会学論集 2008(21) 95-106 2008年7月 査読有り
This paper examines the construction of the home, both in terms of practice and space, from the viewpoint of the culture of sound known as "home music" (katei-ongaku). The concept of home music was spread by music magazines of the 1910's and was described as fostering enjoyable family gatherings (ikka-danran). Home music was realized and transformed from a discourse of concept into a discourse of practice by the spread of phonographs that resounded in the homes of the 1920's. As a result, the home became a space that was constructed by music as a physical, industrial, and cultural phenomenon, and generated by the technology that mediated music.