Religious Sounds Beyond the Global North
Title
Religious Sounds Beyond the Global North
Subtitle
Senses, Media and Power
Price
€ 136,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789463726160
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
354
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 0,00
Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements
List of Audiovisual Samples
Introduction - Carola E. Lorea
The Potential of a Sonic Turn: Towards an Acoustemology of the Post-Secular
Section I - Sounds of Tongues and Hearts: Semiotic Ideologies and Devotional Bodies
Chapter 1 - Alvin Eng Hui Lim - Speaking in Tongues in Comparative Contexts and Their Digital Soundscapes
Chapter 2 - Marco Romano Coppola - Sonic Ways to Embodied Remembrance: Sufi dhikr in an Italian Roma Camp
Chapter 3 - Sukanya Sarbadhikary - Aural Auras of Inner Sounds: Conch Shells, Ritual Instruments, and Devotional Bodies
Section II - Gendering Religious Sounds: Agency, Ritual Spaces, and Sonic Piety
Chapter 4 - Epsita Halder - Sounding Pain: Public-Private Aspects of Shia Women’s Sonic Practices in Muharram
Chapter 5 - Rosalind I. J. Hackett - Sounds Electronic: New Sonic Mediations of Gender and Spiritual Empowerment
Chapter 6 - Pei-ling Huang - Sounding Remembrance, Voicing Mourning: Material, Ethical, and Gendered Productions of a New Voice in Shah Jo Rag
Chapter 7 - Talieh Wartner-Attarzadeh & Sarah Weiss - Sonic Gendering of Ritual Spaces
Section III - Travelling Sounds: Across Boundaries and Borderlands
Chapter 8 - Kazi Fahmida Farzana, Peter Sammonds & Bayes Ahmed - Sounding Resilience and Resistance: Tarana Songs of Rohingya Refugees in Malaysia
Chapter 9 - Tasaw Hsin-chun Lu - Festival as Ritual and Ritual in Festival: Sounding “Exotic Borderlands” in Northern Taiwan
Chapter 10 - Ben Krakauer - Music as Epistemic Bulwark in West Bengal
Section IV - Sonic Politics: Hearing Identity
Chapter 11 - Orlando Woods - The Power and the Politics of Embodying Dancehall: Reconciling Sonic Affect and the Religious Self in Singapore
Chapter 12 - Citra Aryandari - Performing vs Recording: The Sound of Modern Bali
Chapter 13 - David Henley - Amplified Waves: The Politics of Religious Sound in Indonesia and Beyond
Section V - Ensoudment and/As Embodiment: Notes and Noises of Ritual Performance
Chapter 14 - Kenneth Dean - A Theory of Ritual Polyphony in Chinese Religious Performances
Chapter 15 - Nathan Porath - The Ensoundments of the Materially Ethereal in Indigenous Riau (Sumatra)
Chapter 16 - Eben Graves - Bodies with Songs: The Sounds and Politics of Interstitial Lyrics in Bengali Devotional Performance
Afterword - Patrick Eisenlohr

Carola Lorea, Rosalind Hackett (eds)

Religious Sounds Beyond the Global North

Senses, Media and Power

What makes sounds “religious”? How are communities shaped by the things they hear, play, or listen to? This book foregrounds connections between sounds, bodies, and media in the private and public life of communities beyond the Global North, analyzing diverse configurations of the category of sound and various sonic ontologies to usher in a more inclusive global anthro-history of religious sounds.

Religious Sounds Beyond the Global North implements a “sonic turn” in the study of religion by engaging with a diversity of auditory, musical, and embodied practices. Dislodging the Global North as the main point of reference for studies on religious sound, in this volume editors Carola E. Lorea and Rosalind I. J. Hackett propose an acoustemology of the post-secular with an emphasis on Asia as method. Unsettling and expanding existing discussions on senses, media, and power, the editors present religious sounds as co-creating subjectivities and collectivities that coalesce around audible aesthetic formations, demonstrating that religious sounds are not only produced by certain religious traditions but also produce communities, shaping the self and sensitivity of those who participate.
Editors

Carola Lorea

Carola E. Lorea is Assistant Professor of Rethinking Global Religion at the University of Tübingen. She worked as a research fellow at NUS Asia Research Institute, International Institute for Asian Studies, Gonda Foundation, and Südasien-Institut (Heidelberg). Her first monograph is Folklore, Religion and the Songs of a Bengali Madman (2016).

Rosalind Hackett

Rosalind I. J. Hackett is Extraordinary Professor, Desmond Tutu Centre for Religion and Social Justice, University of the Western Cape, South Africa and Chancellor’s Professor Emerita and Professor Emerita of Religious Studies, University of Tennessee. She is Past President and Honorary Life Member, International Association for the History of Religions.