MofA Week 12.

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Global representations and flows

Arjun Appadurai's "scapes"

(from his Modernity at Large (1996)

Perspectives:

  • Ethnoscape
  • Mediascape
  • Finanscape
  • Ideoscape
  • Technoscape (and here one might discuss the significant impact of the global music industry on music in the territorial Arab world)
  • We examine two perspectives on globalization of music of the Arab world:
    • Diasporic Arab musics as "music of the Arab world": music of the Arab ethnoscape
    • The absorption of "music of the Arab world" (often diasporic) into Western music (these days, via a transnational music industry, often classified as "World Music"): Arab music of the mediascape

Background: Orientalism

  • History of Orientalism in art and literature
  • Representations of Oriental music, dance in painting

[1] [2]

  • Representations of the "Orient" in Western art music (Mozart and others: "Alla Turca" techniques)
  • Representations of music and dance on stage, in 19th century Expositions Universelles and World's Fairs, in Europe and America.

Arab diaspora as part of the Arab world

  • Diaspora in France: Development of Rai, Oran to Paris
    • France ruled Algeria as a colony 1834-1962
    • Influx of Algerians to France
      • 1945: 350,000 Algerians in France
      • 1964: estimated 500,000
      • Early 1980s: 800,000
    • Many French of Algerian descent continue to live in the poorer banlieues (low income projects) outside Paris
    • Simultaneously rai musicians fled Algeria
    • Rai therefore developed its modern forms in Paris
    • Listening examples
  • Diaspora in America: Music of Arab Americans
    • Levantines emigrated to America from the 19th century
    • Larger numbers entered in the early 20th century
    • Most immigrants were Syrian-Lebanese Christians
    • Recreation of traditional music centered on church communities
    • hafla, mahrajan

New Orientalism: "Exotic" representations of Arab music and dance in Western popular culture

  • Arab music for Americans
  • Bellydance entertainment at restaurants
  • The Oriental Nightclub in America
  • Hollywood Bellydance (e.g. Nejla Ates (Son of Sinbad , 1955))
  • new representations in popular art
  • Participatory bellydance: a ubiquitous Western phenomenon, considered art/exercise/feminine spirituality/professional showbiz, with its own forms (e.g. tribal), often appearing in the media, e.g. the Belly Dance Superstars (Arab-American women actually play a relatively minor role in this popular culture phenomenon).
  • For discussion: how does "orientalism" of American popular culture in the 1950s and 60s compare to European "orientalism" of the 18th and 19th centuries? What has changed? What has not?

Arab music in the "world music" bins