the world of music (new series) vol. 13 (2024) 1
VWB-Verlag
978-3-86135-937-1 (ISBN)
the world of music (new series) is an
international scholarly journal dedicated to reporting and reflecting
current theoretical perspectives on and research in the field of the
world’s music and dance.
While every issue is designed to focus on a specific topic, the world of music (new series)
does not confine its attention to any single region or methodological
approach. We publish original, and sometimes challenging, contributions
from all over the world, aimed at musicologists and musicians, dance
researchers, anthropologists, cultural studies and post-colonial studies
scholars, and others.
The articles contained in the world of music (new series)
are informed by a variety of theoretical perspectives but devoted to a
shared goal: understanding the musics of the world, their histories, and
their manifold contexts. It is our aim to generate a productive and
creative dialogue between music researchers in disparate locations and
contexts.
I studied Musicology (Christian Ahrens, Richard Widdess, Owen Wright) and Arabic and Islamic Studies (Gerhard Endreß, Stefan Reichmuth) at Ruhr University Bochum (Germany) and London’s School of Oriental and African Studies. Following the completion of my master’s degree at Bochum in 2004 and fieldwork in North India, I took up my doctoral studies. I received my doctoral degree from Ruhr University Bochum in 2007, having written my dissertation on the music and dance of Palau (Micronesia). I lived and conducted fieldwork in Palau from 2005 to 2008, after which I implemented a research project on the performing arts of the so-called sea-nomadic communities of the Southeast Asian island world, primarily the Sama Dilaut (Bajau Laut). I worked mostly in Borneo; my institutional affiliation was first with the International Institute for Asian Studies in Leiden (The Netherlands), and later with the University of Amsterdam. In March 2011, I was appointed full professor of cultural musicology at the Georg August University Göttingen (Germany). As of January 2012, I'm editor-in-chief of the world of music (new series) and full member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Lower Saxony.
Resounding 1923:
Musical Modernities from the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic
Articles
Jacob Olley Resounding 1923: Musical Modernities from the
Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic . 5
Panagiotis C. Poulos “Foreigners in their Homeland”: Song Writing,
Musical Estrangement, and Subjecthood Formation
in Late Ottoman Istanbul . 51
Jacob Olley Joking Aside: European Music and the Dislocation
of Modernity in Nineteenth-Century Ottoman Satire . 83
Burcu Yıldız Transcultural Memory in the Study of Folk Music
in Turkey: 78-rpm Records of the Ottoman
American Diaspora . 123
Onur Güneş Ayas Self-Orientalist Representations of Turkish Classical
Music in the Republican Era: Orientalism and
Orientalism in Reverse . 167
Evrim Hikmet Öğüt Rauf Yekta’s Notes on the 1932 Congress of Arab
Music: Being a Mediator in a Dual Musical Universe 209
Elif Damla Yavuz Institutionalizing Opera in Turkey: Carl Ebert and
the Opera Studio . 243
Erol Köymen Provincializing Acoustics, Feeling Europe: Heritage
and Sonic Atmosphere in Istanbul . 275
Martin Stokes Afterword: Istanbul, Cairo, and the “Demography
of Babel” . 311
| Erscheinungsdatum | 12.01.2025 |
|---|---|
| Reihe/Serie | the world of music (new series) ; 13 (2024) 1 |
| Zusatzinfo | photographs, figs |
| Verlagsort | Aachen |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Maße | 150 x 220 mm |
| Gewicht | 320 g |
| Themenwelt | Kunst / Musik / Theater ► Musik ► Musiktheorie / Musiklehre |
| Schlagworte | Archive • ethno musicology • Ethnomusikologie • music studies • Musikethnologie • musik ethnology |
| ISBN-10 | 3-86135-937-5 / 3861359375 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-3-86135-937-1 / 9783861359371 |
| Zustand | Neuware |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
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