性别与早期伊斯兰宫廷的音乐政治

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
Lisa Nielson
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引用次数: 13

摘要

直到9世纪,在前伊斯兰阿拉伯和美索不达米亚,职业音乐家的角色主要是由女性扮演的。男性被社会禁止从事音乐家的工作,尽管有些人通过穿女性服装和演奏“女性”乐器来突破性别和社会界限。随着伊斯兰教的出现,对qiyān(唱歌的女孩)、mukhannathūn(柔弱的女人)以及后来的男性音乐家的赞助并没有实质性的改变。然而,在阿拔斯王朝早期(公元750-950年),他们在宫廷娱乐中的集体知名度是导致关于伊斯兰音乐法律地位的辩论的几个因素之一。支持和反对的争论发生在政治和宗教法律的解释领域,但几千年来文化景观中对性别音乐表演的传统期望的影响也促成了双方使用的音乐符号学的形成。在这篇文章中,我从精选的9世纪阿拉伯文本的角度研究了音乐家在巴格达早期伊斯兰宫廷中的表现。首先,我总结了前伊斯兰宫廷音乐家的性别角色和表演期望,并指出他们在早期伊斯兰宫廷的延续。然后,我提出了音乐家的形象如何成为中世纪伊斯兰音乐话语中使用的音乐符号学发展的关键参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
GENDER AND THE POLITICS OF MUSIC IN THE EARLY ISLAMIC COURTS
Until the ninth century, the role of the professional musician in pre-Islamic Arabia and Mesopotamia was primarily fulfilled by women. Men were socially prohibited from working as musicians, though some transgressed gender and social boundaries by adopting feminine dress and playing ‘women's’ instruments. With the advent of Islam, patronage of qiyān (singing girls), mukhannathūn (effeminates) and later, male musicians, did not substantially change. During the early Abbasid era (750–950 ce), however, their collective visibility in court entertainments was among several factors leading to debates regarding the legal position of music in Islam. The arguments for and against took place in the realm of politics and interpretation of religious law yet the influence of traditional expectations for gendered musical performance that had existed on the cultural landscape for millennia also contributed to the formation of a musical semiotics used by both sides. In this article, I examine the representation of musicians in the early Islamic court in Baghdad from the perspective of select ninth-century Arabic texts. First, I begin with a summary of the gender roles and performance expectations for pre-Islamic court musicians and point to their continuation into the early Islamic courts. Then, I suggest how the figure of the musician became a key referent in the development of a musical semiotics used in medieval Islamic music discourse.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
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期刊介绍: Early Music History is devoted to the study of music from the early Middle Ages to the end of the seventeenth century. It gives preference to studies pursuing interdisciplinary approaches and to those developing new methodological ideas. The scope is broad and includes manuscript studies, textual criticism, iconography, studies of the relationship between words and music, and the relationship between music and society.
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