Non-Fiction Books:

Music and Dance as Everyday South Asia

Click to share your rating 0 ratings (0.0/5.0 average) Thanks for your vote!

Format:

Hardback
$309.99 was $319.99
Releases

Pre-order to reserve stock from our first shipment. Your credit card will not be charged until your order is ready to ship.

Available for pre-order now

Buy Now, Pay Later with:

4 payments of $77.50 with Afterpay Learn more

Pre-order Price Guarantee

If you pre-order an item and the price drops before the release date, you'll pay the lowest price. This happens automatically when you pre-order and pay by credit card.

If paying by PayPal, Afterpay, Zip or internet banking, and the price drops after you have paid, you can ask for the difference to be refunded.

If Mighty Ape's price changes before release, you'll pay the lowest price.

Availability

This product will be released on

Delivering to:

It should arrive:

  • 12-19 July using International Courier

Description

Music and Dance as Everyday South Asia offers an inclusive lens through which to study the music, dance, and allied arts of South Asia, its diasporas, and the people who produce and use these cultural expressions. The authors in this collection--ethnomusicologists, dance scholars, anthropologists, and practitioners--understand music and dance as everyday lived experience. "The everyday" comprises practices of South Asians in multiple countries, whose identities include numerous castes, classes, tribes, genders, sexualities, religions, nationalities, more than twenty languages, and other affiliations. With the goal to de-emphasize an approach that fetishizes analysis of classical form and its technical virtuosity, this book instead contextualizes the understanding of aesthetic meaning within six themes: place and community; style, genre, and function; intersectional identities of caste, class, and tribe; gender and sexuality; technology, media, and transmission; and diaspora and globalization. The thirty chapters in this collection demonstrate how the arts are meaningful expressions of human identities and relationships for ordinary people as well as virtuosic performers. Each author ties their thesis to hands-on, participatory exercises that provide multiple entryways to understand and engage with cultural meaning. In so doing, they empower classroom dialogue that treats embodied experience as a vital mode of enquiry, supplementing critical textual analysis to cultivate attentive, responsive, and ethical dispositions toward the music and dance practices of other humans and their life experiences.

Author Biography:

Sarah L. Morelli is Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of Denver. Active as a scholar and performer, her work draws on training with sarod maestro Ali Akbar Khan, kathak master Pandit Chitresh Das, and select disciples, and study in several regions of India and the US diaspora. Her book, A Guru's Journey: Pandit Chitresh Das and Indian Classical Dance in Diaspora (2019), details the development of the "California gharana" of kathak. Sarah is a co-founder and soloist with the Leela Dance Collective and Artistic Director of Leela Institute of Kathak, Denver. Zoe C. Sherinian is Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of Oklahoma, a scholar-filmmaker, and percussionist. She is the author of Tamil Folk Music as Dalit Liberation Theology (2014) and has released two documentary films on the Dalit drummers of India. Her research has been supported by the University of Oklahoma and by Fulbright fellowships, the American Institute of Indian Studies, and the Asian Arts Council. Her current book project is titled Drumming Our Liberation: The Community, Cultural, and Sonic Power of the Parai Drum.
Release date Australia
July 5th, 2024
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Contributors
  • Edited by Sarah L Morelli
  • Edited by Zoe C. Sherinian
Pages
480
ISBN-13
9780197566237
Product ID
36808066

Customer previews

Nobody has previewed this product yet. You could be the first!

Write a Preview

Help & options

Filed under...