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Ambient Sufism: Ritual Niches and the Social Work of Musical Form
Barnes and Noble
Ambient Sufism: Ritual Niches and the Social Work of Musical Form
Current price: $115.00
Barnes and Noble
Ambient Sufism: Ritual Niches and the Social Work of Musical Form
Current price: $115.00
Size: Hardcover
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Ambient Sufism
is a study of the intertwined musical lives of several ritual communities in Tunisia that invoke the healing powers of long-deceased Muslim saints through music-driven trance rituals. Richard C. Jankowsky illuminates the virtually undocumented role of women and minorities in shaping the ritual musical landscape of the region, with case studies on men’s and women’s Sufi orders, Jewish and black Tunisian healing musical troupes, and the popular music of hard-drinking laborers, as well as the cohorts involved in mass-mediated staged spectacles of ritual that continue to inject ritual sounds into the public sphere. He uses the term “ambient Sufism” to illuminate these adjacent ritual practices, each serving as a musical, social, and devotional-therapeutic niche while contributing to a larger, shared ecology of practices surrounding and invoking the figures of saints. And he argues that ritual musical formthat is, the large-scale structuring of ritual through musical organizationhas agency; that is, form is revealing and constitutive of experience and encourages particular subjectivities
. Ambient Sufism
promises many useful ideas for ethnomusicology, anthropology, Islamic and religious studies, and North African studies.
is a study of the intertwined musical lives of several ritual communities in Tunisia that invoke the healing powers of long-deceased Muslim saints through music-driven trance rituals. Richard C. Jankowsky illuminates the virtually undocumented role of women and minorities in shaping the ritual musical landscape of the region, with case studies on men’s and women’s Sufi orders, Jewish and black Tunisian healing musical troupes, and the popular music of hard-drinking laborers, as well as the cohorts involved in mass-mediated staged spectacles of ritual that continue to inject ritual sounds into the public sphere. He uses the term “ambient Sufism” to illuminate these adjacent ritual practices, each serving as a musical, social, and devotional-therapeutic niche while contributing to a larger, shared ecology of practices surrounding and invoking the figures of saints. And he argues that ritual musical formthat is, the large-scale structuring of ritual through musical organizationhas agency; that is, form is revealing and constitutive of experience and encourages particular subjectivities
. Ambient Sufism
promises many useful ideas for ethnomusicology, anthropology, Islamic and religious studies, and North African studies.