1st Edition

Iranian Classical Music The Discourses and Practice of Creativity

By Laudan Nooshin Copyright 2015
256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

Questions of creativity, and particularly the processes which underlie creative performance or ’improvisation’, form some of the central areas of interest in current musicology. Yet the predominant discourses on which musicological thought in this area are based have rarely been challenged. In this book Laudan Nooshin interrogates musicological discourses of creativity from the perspective of... Read more
Contents: Preface. Part I Musicological Narratives of Creativity: Approaching the study of musical creativity: musicologies, discourses and others. Part II Creativity in the Iranian Context: Discourses and Structures: Discourses of creativity in Iranian classical music; Disciplining creativity: the radif of Iranian classical music. Part III Beyond Discourse: The Practice of Creativity: Creative performance in Iranian classical music; Postlude: ’Roots in the past and a view towards the future’: contemporary developments in Iranian classical music performance. Appendices; Bibliography; Index.

Biography

Laudan Nooshin is Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology at City University London. She has research interests in contemporary developments in Iranian traditional and popular music, music and gender, globalization, music and cultural identity, and music in Iranian cinema. Her publications include Music and the Play of Power in the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia (ed. Ashgate, 2009) and The Ethnomusicology of Western Art Music (ed. Routledge, 2012). Between 2007 and 2011, Laudan was co-editor of Ethnomusicology Forum (Routledge).

Winner of the British Forum for Ethnomusicology (BFE) Book Prize, 2016.

'Iranian Classical Music is an important addition to the recent studies of music-making in related traditions. As a commendable example of scientific analysis that is theoretically grounded, the book will also appeal to a wider audience that is interested in the innate creativity of the human condition.'
-- John Morgan O'Connell, Cardiff University, Oxford Journal