Share

Music and memory politics: emergence, history, appropriations

Music and memory politics: emergence, history, appropriations
Couverture de disque de "Folk music", Kerala (Inde). Photo: Christine Guillebaud

The quest to reconstruct the styles and histories of musical genres of the past is an old preoccupation. Since the 19th century, the orientalist imaginary contributed considerably to the notion of the existence of “origin-musics”. Whether “Pharaonic,” “Arab,” or “Hindu,” a common reference to the past, seen as prestigious and immutable, contributed to the rationalization of musical knowledge on the basis of constructed connections. The orientalist period being relatively well documented, the POLIMUS program is more focused on ways of speaking of and describing the past over the course of the 20th century and into the 21st. Bringing anthropologists and historians together, it encourages not only a particular emphasis on the process of recounting the past as-such, but also the specific processes involved the narrative’s construction. We will focus on constructs emerging from scientific disciplines like musicology and musical archaeology, and those playing out within artistic creation itself – both areas that are also tied in with local, national, and international political stakes.

Project members
Salwa Castelo-Branco
Leonor Losa
Jean Lambert

Responsable du Projet

Christine GUILLEBAUD , Research Fellow, CNRS , Laboratoire d’Ethnologie et Sociologie Comparative, Centre de recherche en Ethnomusicologie

Partenaires au sein du labex

  • Laboratory of Ethnology and Comparative Sociology (LESC) - UMR 7186
  • Quai Branly Museum - Jacques Chirac

Autres partenaires associés

Institute of Ethnomusicology (INET), New University of Lisbon, Portugal
http://www.inetmd.pt/

Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale (IFAO), Cairo, Egypt
http://www.ifao.egnet.net/

Durée du projet

3 years

Mots-clés

Music, politicies, memory, history, technologies

Share
Déplier Replier
CORDEREIX, LAMBERT, MOUSSALI

The Cairo Congress of arab music


ISBN:  978-2-7177-2648-0
Editeur:  Bibliothèque nationale de France
Ouvrage: 18CD. Includes accompanying book in French, English and Arabic (195, 60 pages : illustrations (1 color)) in box. Includes bibliographical references.

TOUT A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Share
Déplier Replier

Julien JUGAND


Titre:  Doctor in ethnology
Fonction:  Visiting researcher at the CREM-LESC
Institution:  Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative, UMR 7186


Participe au projet:  Music and memory politics: emergence, history, appropriations


Email:  julien.jugand@gmail.com


Bio

Julien Jugand holds a PhD in ethnology and is a music teacher and musician. Member of the Centre de Recherche en Ethnomusicologie (CREM-LESC) and of the cluster Pasts in the Present, he works in India since 2005 on modern history of Hindustani music's patronage. With the sociologist Joël Cabalion he also investigates political uses of bouddhist and ambedkarite music among lower castes and untouchables in Maharashtra. He teaches at the Department of Popular Music of Camille Saint-Saëns national school of music in Dieppe.

Share
Déplier Replier

Séverine GABRY-THIENPONT


Titre:  Ethnomusicologist
Institution:  Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative, UMR 7186


Participe au projet:  Music and memory politics: emergence, history, appropriations


Email:  sevgabry@free.fr


Bio

Since 2014, Séverine Gabry-Thienpont is a Scientific Member of the French Institute of Cairo (Ifao). She defended her PhD "Anthropologie des musiques coptes en Égypte contemporaine" in 2013. Her research focuses now on the religious popular musics in Egypt (christian and muslim mouled, Zar [possession ritual] and songs of praise) and their developments on the urban scene. Thanks to this approach, she tackles:

  1. the interfaith relations and the regional discrepancies in Egypt;
  2. the  interrelationships between the musical repertoires considered as "traditional", the cultural centers (public or private) and the manifold performance spaces;
  3. the circulations, musical creations and cultural exchanges, from the second half of the last century.

Share
Déplier Replier

Christine GUILLEBAUD


Titre:  Doctor in Anthropology, ethnomusicology
Fonction:  Research Fellow, CNRS
Institution:  Laboratoire d’Ethnologie et Sociologie Comparative, Centre de recherche en Ethnomusicologie , CNRS


Co-responsable du projet:  Music and memory politics: emergence, history, appropriations


Email:  christine.guillebaud@cnrs.fr
Page Perso:  Christine Guillebaud's page on the CREM website (http://www.crem-cnrs.fr/index.php)


WORSHIP SOUND SPACES | Architecture, Acoustics and Anthropology

Christine GUILLEBAUD , Catherine LAVANDIER


Editeur:  London/New York: Routledge

Orchestrer le passé - Singing the Past

Christine GUILLEBAUD , Sybille EMERIT , Julien JUGAND


Editeur:  Presses universitaires de Paris Nanterre, Collection Les passés dans le présent
ISBN:  2840165287
URL / DOI:  Site de l'éditeur