Have you read my dissertation? Your suggestion makes no sense. Did you know
Portia Maultsby was my teacher? Have you seen that chart of Black music
genres floating around IG and FB? She made that. That’s part of her life’s
work. And now, since I got to help her with it in graduate school, I get to
help her update it professionally. So, shhhh.

Do you not live in the United States? Do you not understand what is
changing here in the United States? Stop embarrassing yourself.

And why didn’t you get mad at Andrew Duke for sharing it?


Denise Dalphond



On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 5:24 AM Sjoerd <sjoerdvell...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Denise, is there any Social Justice Bandwagon you will not jump on? For
> the love of the 808, please refrain from this and find common ground in the
> beauty of this music instead of trying to sow division between people by
> this racebaiting.
>
> I think few people care if the writer of the article has a Black or White
> skin colour, since what matters is the message, and the message is
> T-E-C-H-N-O and Unity between people from all walks of life.
>
> Andrew, thanks for posting this. A lot has been written on the subject of
> Detroit Techno and I appreciate someone took the time and effort to collect
> them all. Seriously, the further we move forward in time, the more I
> realize that the future about this technological dystopia was already
> written way back in the 80's, with the origins of Techno in the Motorcity.
>
> On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 at 16:11, Denise Dalphond <denisedalph...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> A majority of those articles and books are by white people. What do they
>> mean by Black perspective. You could also go to the Dancecult website:
>> https://dancecult-research.net/references/
>>
>> Denise
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 9:53 AM Andrew Duke <
>> andrewdukecognit...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Dweller Electronics
>>>
>>> writings from a black perspective
>>>
>>> Our co-editor Ryan Clarke has researched a list of articles, interviews
>>> and documentaries about techno and its history. We have compiled it into
>>> this library that will be updated as we find more relevant work.
>>>
>>> It is organized by date and divided into two lists “Reading” and
>>> “Audio/Visual”.
>>>
>>> https://dwellerforever.blog/library
>>>
>>> --
Denise Dalphond, Ph. D.
ethnomusicologist
schoolcraftwax.work

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