Évènements

M. Stokes — Hydropoetics, Song and ‘Deep Time’ in an Anatolian Landscape

Séminaire du CREM

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Monday 26 February 2024 10:00 - 12:00
Lesc – salle 308F (3e étage)
21, allée de l’Université, Nanterre

Présentation

Seminaire Stokes 2023Avec Martin Stokes*
The case of Enver Demirbağ (1935-2010), a noted vocalist in the ‘Harput Music’ (‘Harput Müziği’) tradition of South East Anatolia, invites thinking about the relationships between vocal production and geological deep time. This is, indeed, a catastrophic landscape, marked by inundations and earthquakes, deeply etched in local myth and mysticism. And by human and more recent ecological catastrophes, too. One is the nearby Keban dam,
completed in 1974, intended to supply the Turkish state with a quarter of its electricity needs. Demirbağ’s voice is coterminous with the dam, with the wealth it bought, briefly, to the region, and with the decline that followed. We might want to think, however, about the entanglement of this voice and its poetry with the landscape on a much broader scale. With reference to some recent ethnographic thinking, notably that of Gordon Gastillo on rubble (Gastillo 2014), David Irvine on anthropology and geological deep time (Irvine 2022), and the 'environmental humanities' touching ethnomusicology at the moment, I will explore the ‘hydropoetic’ entanglement of voice, water and landscape in this - and broader - contexts.

* Martin Stokes is King Edwards Professor of Music at Kings College London. His most recent book is Music and Citizenship (Oxford, 2023). Currently he is PI of the ERC/UKRI project 'Beyond 1932: Rethinking Musical Modernity in the Middle East and North Africa'.


LESC CREM Picto C webThe CREM (Centre for Research in Ethnomusicology) seminar takes place on two Mondays per month, from 10:00 to 12:00. Members of the CREM (doctoral students included) and invited researchers present their ongoing work. The presentations last 50 minutes, and are followed by a coffee break and discussion hour.

Occasionally, the seminar takes the form of a workshop which brings together several researchers around a common theme. In these cases, the seminar takes place over an afternoon, or sometimes an entire day.

Participation in the seminar is open to everyone. It is also integrated into the Master’s degree in ethnomusicology at the Universities of Paris Nanterre and Paris Saint-Denis.

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