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ID159384
Title ProperHereditary Musicians, Hindustani Music and the ‘Public Sphere’ in Late Nineteenth-Century Calcutta
LanguageENG
AuthorMcNeil, Adrian
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the late nineteenth century, Hindustani music and its culture arrived in Calcutta's public sphere. It was carried there as much through the migration and agency of the professional lives of the ‘ustads from the North’ as it was through the forces of coloniality, modernity and Hindu nationalism. On its arrival, the performance practice and social organisation of Hindustani music culture came face to face with the bustle of social and cultural experimentation and innovation that came to define the ‘Bengal Renaissance’. Hindustani music was certainly not isolated from this larger cultural dynamic and, over four or five decades, its practitioners were compelled to formulate a series of responses in order to negotiate the challenges which this public sphere posed to past practices of this tradition transplanted from North India to Bengal. Their responses bring into focus a number of significant issues: firstly, the nature of these responses and the consequences they had for the development of Hindustani music and its culture; secondly, the issue of the discourse of ‘modern’ Hindustani music that arose from this encounter; and thirdly, questions over whose voice(s) were represented and whose voice(s) were marginalised in the process. Finally, there is the issue of how these responses still resonate in Hindustani music practice today, as they continue to reside in and frame the contemporary musical imagination.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 41, No.2; Jun 2018: p.297-314
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2018-06 41, 2
Key WordsModernity ;  Hindu Nationalism ;  Tradition ;  Public Sphere ;  Colonial Bengal ;  Hindustani Music ;  Hereditary Musicians