Abstract
The various ways whereby spatial conditions afford to
monumentalize culture and to appropriate geographically
demarcated places in terms of individual and collective meaning
structures has been amply documented in urban cultural studies.
However, considerably less attention has been paid to how
cultural identity is produced against the background of musical
temporality. By way of a phenomenological inquiry into the
staged spectacle of James Corden’s (the host of CBS Network’s
Late Late Show) Carpool Karaoke, this paper addresses the issues
of directly lived experience and authenticity as facets of cultural
identity. By critically discussing the assumptions of self-presence
and auto-affectivity while singing and listening to one’s sung
voice against the background of pre-recorded songs, the notion
of directly lived musical experience is put to the test. Furthermore,
by examining the dramaturgical scaffolding of Carpool Karaoke,
the analysis points to wider implications for post-modern cultural
studies in terms of an identified ironic reversal of modernist
universal criteria of legitimacy in favor of a celebration of postmodern
being-with inauthentically. The analysis of the selected
Carpool Karaoke corpus utilizes a resourceful blend of
phenomenological method, semiotics and interpretive
videography while challenging embedded orthodoxies in the
extant literature.