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Among the Jasmine Trees
Music and Modernity in Contemporary Syria
Music / Culture
Sales Date: 2009-11-03
The first ethnographic study of music-making in modern Syria
How does a Middle Eastern community create a modern image through its expression of heritage and authenticity? In Among the Jasmine Trees: Music and Modernity in Contemporary Syria, Jonathan H. Shannon investigates expressions of authenticity in Syria's musical culture, which is particularly known for embracing and preserving the Arab musical tradition, and which has seldom been researched in depth by Western scholars. Music plays a key role in the process of self-imaging by virtue of its ability to convey feeling and emotion, and Shannon explores a variety of performance genres, Sufi rituals, song lyrics, melodic modes, and aesthetic criteria. Shannon shows that although the music may evoke the old, the traditional, and the local, these are re-envisioned as signifiers of the modern national profile. A valuable contribution to the study of music and identity and to the ethnomusicology of the modern Middle East, Among the Jasmine Trees details this music and its reception for the first time, offering an original theoretical framework for understanding contemporary Arab culture, music, and society.
List of Figures
A Note on Transliteration
Preface
Introduction: The Aesthetics of Authenticity in Contemporary Syria
Among the Jasmine Trees
Sentiment and Authentic Spirit: Composing Syrian Modernity
Constructing Musical Authenticity: History, Cultural Memory, Emotion
Body Memory, Temporality, and Transformation in the Dhikr
Authentic Performance and the Performance of Authenticity
Tarab, Sentiment, and Authenticity
Notes Toward Closure
Epilogue: 2000
Notes
Glossary of Selected Arabic Terms
Selected Bibliography and Discography
Index
JONATHAN HOLT SHANNON is an assistant professor in the department of anthropology at Hunter College of the City University of New York.
"Among the Jasmine Trees is a hauntingly beautiful example of all that is best in contemporary anthropology and ethnomusicology and their mutual nexus with performance studies and the ideas of embodied knowledge."
~Jonathan Zilberg, Jakarta Institute for the Arts, Leonardo Reviews
""Among the Jasmine Trees is a hauntingly beautiful example of all that is best in contemporary anthropology and ethnomusicology and their mutual nexus with performance studies and the ideas of embodied knowledge.""
~Jonathan Zilberg, Jakarta Institute for the Arts, Leonardo Reviews
""Shannon provides an evocative and highly readable discussion of how music and discourse about music factor in processes of identity-formation in modern Syria.""
~Anne Elise Thomas, Ethnomusicology
"Both intellectually stimulating and delightfully engaging, the book stands out for its scholarly rigor and rich documentation. Shannon approaches his subject matter with keen musical sensibility and remarkable affinity for the community that he has studied."
~A.J. Racy, author of Making Music in the Arab World
"Throughout the 20th century, societies in the Middle East have labored to produce their own modernities which are often manifest in expressive culture. Shannon's nuanced and expert text should motivate thought about Middle Eastern societies for years to come.""
~Virginia Danielson, Loeb Music Library, Harvard University