Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context

This thesis is an ethnographic study of Kurdish political music at three cultural centers in Istanbul, Turkey. Activists at these cultural centers engage in musical activities that perform the Kurdish nation in Istanbul, outside of the Kurdish homeland but home to a large Kurdish migrant community....

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Main Author: Withers, Jonathan Sanjeev
Other Authors: Wolf, Richard K.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Harvard University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:33493329
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-334933292017-07-27T15:52:05ZKurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban ContextWithers, Jonathan SanjeevMusicThis thesis is an ethnographic study of Kurdish political music at three cultural centers in Istanbul, Turkey. Activists at these cultural centers engage in musical activities that perform the Kurdish nation in Istanbul, outside of the Kurdish homeland but home to a large Kurdish migrant community. By drawing on diverse musical sources, activist musicians create and perform music that promotes an ideological narrative of history and politics in which the Kurdish freedom struggle plays a central role. The efforts of these musicians are fundamental to creating and maintaining a Kurdish activist public in Istanbul. I examine the complex process of identifying what is Kurdish in Turkey to introduce how activists perform this identification musically. Activists draw from musical behaviors they view as traditional, including singing by dengbêj singers and govend dance, to reinforce links to the homeland. These links take the form of affective symbols that in turn inform the aesthetics of contemporary Kurdish music. Members of the Kurdish activist community link genres that have arisen in recent decades, from arabesk to gerilla music, to ideological stances and attitudes with the power to destroy activist enthusiasm or to sustain it. I examine three performance contexts in detail: informal situations where Kurds meet, chat, and drink; concerts that act as models for and of the activist community; and public protests, where activism meets the broader public.MusicWolf, Richard K.2017-07-25T14:38:37Z2016-052016-05-1920162017-07-26T07:31:03ZThesis or Dissertationtextapplication/pdfWithers, Jonathan Sanjeev. 2016. Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences.http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:33493329enopenhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAAHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Music
spellingShingle Music
Withers, Jonathan Sanjeev
Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
description This thesis is an ethnographic study of Kurdish political music at three cultural centers in Istanbul, Turkey. Activists at these cultural centers engage in musical activities that perform the Kurdish nation in Istanbul, outside of the Kurdish homeland but home to a large Kurdish migrant community. By drawing on diverse musical sources, activist musicians create and perform music that promotes an ideological narrative of history and politics in which the Kurdish freedom struggle plays a central role. The efforts of these musicians are fundamental to creating and maintaining a Kurdish activist public in Istanbul. I examine the complex process of identifying what is Kurdish in Turkey to introduce how activists perform this identification musically. Activists draw from musical behaviors they view as traditional, including singing by dengbêj singers and govend dance, to reinforce links to the homeland. These links take the form of affective symbols that in turn inform the aesthetics of contemporary Kurdish music. Members of the Kurdish activist community link genres that have arisen in recent decades, from arabesk to gerilla music, to ideological stances and attitudes with the power to destroy activist enthusiasm or to sustain it. I examine three performance contexts in detail: informal situations where Kurds meet, chat, and drink; concerts that act as models for and of the activist community; and public protests, where activism meets the broader public. === Music
author2 Wolf, Richard K.
author_facet Wolf, Richard K.
Withers, Jonathan Sanjeev
author Withers, Jonathan Sanjeev
author_sort Withers, Jonathan Sanjeev
title Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
title_short Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
title_full Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
title_fullStr Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
title_full_unstemmed Kurdish Music-Making in Istanbul: Music, Sentiment and Ideology in a Changing Urban Context
title_sort kurdish music-making in istanbul: music, sentiment and ideology in a changing urban context
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2017
url http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:33493329
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