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Deep Purple ✔Correct Answer--Band that introduced metal to Japan
Music Nationalism ✔Correct Answer--The use of music specifically to assert the all-important
sense of united community within nation-state, and also to assert some sense of difference to
citizens of other nation-states
Merengue ✔Correct Answer--Popular dance music that has embraced couple dance
Diaspora ✔Correct Answer--any group that has been dispersed, often forcibly, outside its
traditional homeland
Transnationalism ✔Correct Answer--extending or going beyond national boundaries
Politics ✔Correct Answer--the negotiation of power relations
Protest Music ✔Correct Answer--A tool used to criticize dominant political institutions, beliefs,
events, express frustration, provide inspiration and uplift, and offer alternatives
Indigeneity ✔Correct Answer--"First People" status
Subaltern ✔Correct Answer--Population outside hegemonic power; often don't have a voice in
politics
Decolonization ✔Correct Answer--Undoing colonization (nation asserting independence from the
colonizer)
blank ✔Correct Answer--blank
Punk ✔Correct Answer--A cultural style, or attitude defined by a rebellion against authority and a
deliberate rejection of middle-class values;a musical genre that embraces a DIY, back-to-basics
approach to rock music
Protopunk ✔Correct Answer--Late 1960s; confrontational, aggressive, nihilistic
HarDCore ✔Correct Answer--a louder, hard, faster version of punk; "A combustible of white
teenage male angst and frustrated energy"
Rafael Trujilio ✔Correct Answer--Anti-Haitian Totalitarian who ruled in DR from 1930-1961 and
promoted Merengue as a national music
"Que Vive El Jefe" ✔Correct Answer--"Long live the chief;" song pretty much praising Trujilio and
his leadership
Merengue as DR's national identity ✔Correct Answer--Because of its ability to cross lines of race,
class and region