Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Drones, Tones, and Timbres: Sounding Place among Nomads of the Inner Asian Mountain-Steppes

Autor Carole Pegg
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 feb 2024
An indispensable study of the music of Altai-Sayan peoples

Based on more than twenty years of collaborative research, Carole Pegg’s long-awaited participatory ethnography explores how Indigenous nomadic peoples of Russia’s southern Siberian republics (Altai, Khakassia, Tyva) sound multiphonies of place in a post-Soviet global world. Inspired by the mountain-steppe ecology and pathways of nomadism, soundscapes created in performative ritual events cross political and multiple-world boundaries in a shamanic-animist universe, enabling human and spirit actor interactions in a series of sensuous worlds. As with the “throat-singing” for which Indigenous Altai-Sayan peoples are famous, senses of place involve sonic relations, rootedness, movement, and plurality. Pegg echoes their drone-partials musical and ontological models in an innovative theoretical entwinement. Three strands form the book’s multivocal drone, the partials of which sound in each chapter: ontological sonicality and musicality that enables emplacement and movement; the importance of shamanism-animism--at the core of Indigenous spiritual practices--for personhood and community; and the agency of sonic performances. Sounding place, Pegg demonstrates, is essential to the identities, ways of life, and very senses of being of Indigenous Altai-Sayan peoples.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 50770 lei

Preț vechi: 62679 lei
-19% Nou

Puncte Express: 762

Preț estimativ în valută:
9723 10018$ 8145£

Carte nepublicată încă

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780252045455
ISBN-10: 0252045459
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 30 black & white photographs, 1 chart, 4 tables
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Illinois Press
Colecția University of Illinois Press

Recenzii

“An original and fascinating exploration of music and place among a range of closely linked societies of the Altai, Khakas, and Tyva/Tuva republics in Inner Asia. The author shows how senses of place and movement are actually generated by the sensory qualities of performance practices. Pegg explains how every aspect of the landscape and cosmology is musical, as humans are ‘eager to connect sonically’ with these forces and with their ancestors.”--Piers Vitebsky, author of Living without the Dead: Loss and Redemption in a Jungle Cosmos

Notă biografică

Carole Pegg is an anthropologist, ethnomusicologist, and senior researcher at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of Mongolian Music, Dance and Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments Languages, Transliteration, Translation
Companion Website
Part One: Emplacement, Ontologies, Bodies
Introduction
1. Performative Bodies
Part Two: Sounding Middle Worlds
2. Human Communities
3. Spirit Actors, Spirit Places, Nomadic Landscapes
4. Ancestors and Archaeology
Part Three: Attuning to Upper and Lower Worlds
5. The White Way
6. With-Spirit Epic Performer
7. Shamanic Roads
Coda
Appendix
Participants
Notes
Glossary
References
Index