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Musicophilia in Mumbai – Performing Subjects and the Metropolitan Unconscious

Autor Tejaswini Niranjana
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 mai 2023
In Musicophilia in Mumbai Tejaswini Niranjana traces the place of Hindustani classical music in Mumbai throughout the long twentieth century as the city moved from being a seat of British colonial power to a vibrant postcolonial metropolis. Drawing on historical archives, newspapers, oral histories, and interviews with musicians, critics, students, and instrument makers, as well as her own personal experiences as a student of Hindustani classical music, Niranjana shows how the widespread love of music throughout the city created a culture of collective listening that brought people of diverse social and linguistic backgrounds together. This culture produced modern subjects Niranjana calls musicophiliacs, whose subjectivity was grounded in a social rather than an individualistic context. By attending concerts, learning instruments, performing at home and in various urban environments, musicophiliacs embodied forms of modernity that were distinct from those found in the West. In tracing the relationship between musical practices and the formation of the social subject, Niranjana opens up new ways to think about urbanity, subjectivity, culture, and multiple modernities.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781478008187
ISBN-10: 1478008180
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 48 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 153 x 228 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press

Descriere

In Musicophilia in Mumbai Tejaswini Niranjana traces the place of Hindustani classical music in Mumbai throughout the long twentieth century as the city moved from being a seat of British colonial power to a vibrant postcolonial metropolis.

Drawing on historical archives, newspapers, oral histories, and interviews with musicians, critics, students, and instrument makers, as well as her own personal experiences as a student of Hindustani classical music, Niranjana shows how the widespread love of music throughout the city created a culture of collective listening that brought people of diverse social and linguistic backgrounds together.

This culture produced modern subjects Niranjana calls musicophiliacs, whose subjectivity was grounded in a social rather than an individualistic context. By attending concerts, learning instruments, performing at home and in various urban environments, musicophiliacs embodied forms of modernity that were distinct from those found in the West.

In tracing the relationship between musical practices and the formation of the social subject, Niranjana opens up new ways to think about urbanity, subjectivity, culture, and multiple modernities.


Cuprins

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. On Not Being Able to Learn Music 1
1. "Yaa Nagari Mein Lakh Darwaza": Musicophilia and the Lingua Musica in Mumbai 19
2. Mehfil (Performance): The Spaces of Music 46
3. Deewaana (The Mad One): The Lover of Music 86
4. Taleem: Pedagogy and the Performing Subject 128
5. Nearness as Distance, or Distance as Nearness 162
Afterword 181
Glossary 199
Notes 205
Selected Bibliography 227
Index 235

Notă biografică