MI week 10
Syncretism from an Islamic perspective: spirit propitiation/healing groups and practices combining Islamic and sub-saharan Africa: Gnawa and Zar
Tuesday (10a)
GNAWA
Due
Read/listen/browse the “Gnawa Stories” website: https://www.ibiblio.org/gnawastories/
Be prepared to outline the history and rituals of the Gnawa in class.
Using jstor locate one recent scholarly article about Gnawa or Gnawa music, including:
- Gnawa history
- current ethnography of Gnawa, their social life, rituals and music
- Gnawa folklorization, festivalization, popularization, fusion, locally and globally
Lcate some relevant online media.
Prepare to present your article and media in class by:
- summarizing the content, illustrated with an online example or two (video, audio, image, map...)
- offering a critique in light of the “Gnawa stories” website, and what you have learned about music and Islam in the course thus far. Feel free to raise questions as much as answering them - standard practice for a critique.
Submit a one-page summary/critique of your article (along with the article's title/author/date) on eClass 10a. Please do this before class so that I can access the materials for your in-class presentation.
Class
Intro to Gnawa and its globalization
Some lilas:
History: how the Gnawas came to Morocco...
- West African history: general timeline; art timeline; West African timeline, empires of West Africa (BBC); Basil Davidson on Empires of Gold
- Islamic history
- Umayyads in Spain
- Berber and Arab empires of North Africa
- al-Murabitun (Almoravids)
- al-Muwahhidun (Almohads)
- Saadi dynasty
- [http://archnet.org/authorities/2872 Paul Bowles
Gnawa fusions: jazz, funk, hiphop, festival
- Randy Weston [2](jazz)
- Hassan Hakmoun: Gnawa fusion
- Sidi Yasser: Gnawa fusion
- Belikemuhammad: hiphop MC (Anas Canon?
- Gnawa festival[3]
Student presentations as per above.
Thursday (10b)
GNAWA and ZAR
Due
- Read/listen/watch:
- Browse sites and watch videos associated with two folkloric centers in Cairo:
- Read: Liminal Rites and Female Symbolism in the Egyptian Zar Possession Cult, Richard Natvig, Numen, Vol. 35, Fasc. 1 (Jul., 1988), pp. 57-68 Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3270140
- Write: one page on similarities and differences between Gnawa and Zar. Consider: the people, the ritual, the music - but also the ways this music has been folklorized and turned international. How, when, and where does the performance retain a spiritual significance, and why is that significance at other times and places eliminated? What are the reasons why the two traditions may be similar? Why are there differences? Submit this page on 10b (eClass).
Class
- Those who didn't present a reading on Gnawa last time, please do so this time.
- Introduction to Zar
- Iranian zar
- Sudanese zar from Sudan
- Egyptian Zar: very similar to dhikr; even same musicians. Note male musicians; female adepts and patients.
- Sudanese Zar in Egypt: The Tanboura[9][10][11]
- Rango
- Folklorization, world music, belly dance...(use of ayub rhythm)
- Discussion: comparison of Gnawa and Zar; spirit/healing groups in Islam...