Socialist and Anti-Capitalist Alternatives through Music, Sound, and Movement
Organizer(s): Ana Hofman (Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts,Ljubljana, Slovenia), Rasika Ajotikar (University of HIldesheim, Germany), Michael Birenbaum Quintero (Boston University)
Chair(s): Ana Hofman (Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
This roundtable gathers around historical materialism and socialist modes of analysis and political practice for music, sound and movement. We seek to envision anti-capitalist theorization and praxis that challenge the liberal paradigm as the universal ground for sociopolitical and ethnomusicological inquiry. Panelists examine the ways in which socialist and anti-capitalist projects have structured auralities and corporalities around the globe and offer them as models to confront the current impasses colluding against imagining anti-capitalist futures; both ethnomusicology’s internal ideologies and brushes with socialism; historical and contemporary employment of historical materialist analysis; and past and present socialist responses to the crises of capitalism. Panelist 1 explores the anti-caste musical landscape of modern western India to trace the tensions between caste and class over the 20th and 21st centuries. Panelist 2 focuses on the legacies of Yugoslav workers’ self-management in exploring the potentials and limits of music and sound in building productive relations based on social ownership. Panelist 3 discusses the pertinence of two concepts stemming from historical materialism - acoustic labor and sound praxis - to ethnographic research on music and sound in working-classRio de Janeiro. Panelist 4 works on the legacies of commoning and cooperative movements in Reconstruction-era Louisiana to foreground the counter-plantation politics of Black brass bands. Panelist 5 examines how socialist artists in the 1970s drew on labor union folk dances from the 1960s to mobilize public space and create solidarity among workers in Turkey. Panelist 6 examines ethnomusicology’s ideological commitments to liberalism in the 1990s globalization debates.
Presentations in the Session
Roundtable Participant
Ana Hofman
Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Roundtable Participant
Rasika Ajotikar
University of HIldesheim, Germany
Roundtable Participant
Michael Birenbaum Quintero
Boston University
Roundtable Participant
Samuel Araujo
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Roundtable Participant
Ben Barson
Bucknell University
Roundtable Participant
Sevi Bayraktar
the Cologne University of Music and Dance, Germany