SEMSCC 2007 Keynote
speaker
Josh Kun
Associate Professor
Annenberg School
of Communication, USC
“The World Begins Here: Listening to Tijuana.”
About
Josh Kun
He
holds a PhD in Ethnic Studies from UC Berkeley. A former Arts Writers Fellow with
The Sundance Institute, he is the author of Audiotopia: Music, Race, and America (UC Press) which won a
2006 American Book Award. His articles on popular music, the pop cultures
of the US-Mexico border, and the music of Los
Angeles have appeared in numerous scholarly journals
and anthologies. As a critic and journalist, he is a regular contributor
to The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles
Magazine, and Tu Ciudad Los Angeles.
From 1998-2006, he wrote "Frequencies," a bi-weekly music column
published in the San Francisco Bay Guardian and Boston Phoenix.
His writing has also appeared in LA Weekly, The Believer, Guilt
& Pleasure, Village Voice, SPIN, Mother Jones, Rolling
Stone, and in Mexico's
La Jornada and Proceso.
He has written the liner notes to CDs by Herb Alpert and the Tijuana
Brass, Maldita Vecindad,
and Sammy Davis Jr. In 2005, he was a regular critic on “The Movie Show With John Ridley” on
American Movie Classics, and he has also appeared as a culture critic on ABC,
The Disney Channel, UPN, Fox Latin America, BBC Radio, and National Public
Radio. From 1999-2000, he hosted “The Red Zone,” Southern California's
first commercial Latin Rock radio program, on 107.1 FM and in 2002 was the
show's host on MTV-español. From 2003-2005, he
hosted and associate produced “Rokamole,” a weekly
Latin alternative music video show on KJLA-LATV. He has also worked as a
consultant and curator with The Los Angeles Public Library, Walt Disney Concert
Hall, and the Santa Monica Museum of Art. Most recently, he co-founded Reboot Stereophonic, a non-profit record label dedicated to
excavating lost treasures of Jewish-American music, and co-launched the audioblog, hippocampusmusic.
He is currently writing a book about Tijuana, Mexico.