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dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1951/60271
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11401/71537
dc.description.sponsorshipThis work is sponsored by the Stony Brook University Graduate School in compliance with the requirements for completion of degree.en_US
dc.formatMonograph
dc.format.mediumElectronic Resourceen_US
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherThe Graduate School, Stony Brook University: Stony Brook, NY.
dc.typeDissertation
dcterms.abstractThough different orders organize subjects in audibly distinguishable ways, only rarely have ethnomusicologists theorized how musical practice articulates to practices of government. Through a diachronic case study of Tirana, Albania, this dissertation interrogates how the production of popular music has supported the production of popular consent to illiberal regimes both socialist (1944-1992) and capitalist (1992-present). While previous ethnomusicological and musicological studies of eastern bloc musical practice have focused (respectively) on professionalized folk music and concert music, my research examines the composition, performance, and reception of the popular genre "light music" (Alb. muzik?_ e leht?_) at an annual song competition the Festival of Song (Festivali i K?_ng?_s, 1962-present). An eclectic genre blending jazz, Anglo-American pop, Italian song, socialist realist concert music, and folkloric material, light music provided attractive visions of Albanian-ness--and an ideologically "correct" leisure activity--to socialist-era listeners isolated from the rest of the world. Since Albania's transition from socialism in 1992, a privatized music industry has decentralized light music's production, transforming musicians' and listeners' social space as it reinserts them into now-hegemonic "democratic" political projects. While socialism depended on transforming individuals' consciousness to create a "new person" for the "society of the future," Albanian neoliberalism's "return to Europe" today depends on the molding of capitalist subjects. Through archival research and ethnographic fieldwork, I reconstruct a genealogy of Albanian popular music production in order to survey and link the aesthetic-cultural projects of state-funded music intellectuals to the political programs of governing elites. I argue that the musical and cultural projects through which elites have sought to inculcate in individuals successive forms of "modern" personhood, or modes by which one might recognize him- or herself as a national political subject, have functioned as strategies of governance under both socialist and capitalist orders. Linking notions of personhood to processes of state hegemony, this case study parses the relationship between musical practice and post-1945 political-economic structures by combining critical perspectives on governmentality, national cultural policy, and the postwar state.
dcterms.available2013-05-24T16:38:20Z
dcterms.available2015-04-24T14:47:51Z
dcterms.contributorFuller, Sarahen_US
dcterms.contributorSugarman, Jane C.en_US
dcterms.contributorMoehn, Fredericken_US
dcterms.contributorWinkler, Peteren_US
dcterms.contributorVerdery, Katherineen_US
dcterms.creatorTochka, Nicholas
dcterms.dateAccepted2013-05-24T16:38:20Z
dcterms.dateAccepted2015-04-24T14:47:51Z
dcterms.dateSubmitted2013-05-24T16:38:20Z
dcterms.dateSubmitted2015-04-24T14:47:51Z
dcterms.descriptionDepartment of Musicen_US
dcterms.extent375 pg.en_US
dcterms.formatMonograph
dcterms.formatApplication/PDFen_US
dcterms.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/1951/60271
dcterms.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/11401/71537
dcterms.issued2012-12-01
dcterms.languageen_US
dcterms.provenanceMade available in DSpace on 2013-05-24T16:38:20Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 StonyBrookUniversityETDPageEmbargo_20130517082608_116839.pdf: 41286 bytes, checksum: 425a156df10bbe213bfdf4d175026e82 (MD5) Previous issue date: 1en
dcterms.provenanceMade available in DSpace on 2015-04-24T14:47:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 3 StonyBrookUniversityETDPageEmbargo_20130517082608_116839.pdf.jpg: 1934 bytes, checksum: c116f0e1e7be19420106a88253e31f2e (MD5) StonyBrookUniversityETDPageEmbargo_20130517082608_116839.pdf.txt: 336 bytes, checksum: 84c0f8f99f2b4ae66b3cc3ade09ad2e9 (MD5) StonyBrookUniversityETDPageEmbargo_20130517082608_116839.pdf: 41286 bytes, checksum: 425a156df10bbe213bfdf4d175026e82 (MD5) Previous issue date: 1en
dcterms.publisherThe Graduate School, Stony Brook University: Stony Brook, NY.
dcterms.subjectAlbania, ethnomusicology, governmentality, popular music, postsocialism, socialism
dcterms.subjectMusic--European studies--Cultural anthropology
dcterms.titleCreating Light Music at the Festival of Song: Politics, Personhood, and Cultural Production in Tirana, Albania (1944-present)
dcterms.typeDissertation


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