BookFrontier
Divine Inspirations by David Harnish

Book

Divine Inspirations

Music and Islam in Indonesia

David Harnish, Anne Rasmussen, David D. Harnish

Oxford University Press · Print & ebook · May 11, 2011

Reading lane: Ethnomusicology

Indonesia is celebrated for its courtly arts, its beautiful beaches, its tourist attractions, and its artisan marketplace.

At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy EthnomusicologyGood for readers who enjoy Ethnomusicology.

Book Details

Authors
David Harnish, Anne Rasmussen, David D. Harnish
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Published
May 11, 2011
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Ethnomusicology
Reading lane
Ethnomusicology

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Ethnomusicology

About This Book

Indonesia is celebrated for its courtly arts, its beautiful beaches, its tourist attractions, and its artisan marketplace. Yet long overdue is a look at Indonesian Islam as the source of and inspiration for the arts throughout the history of its people, and in the dynamic popular performances of today. From the rhythmic grooves of dangdut, the archipelago's tenacious pop music, to the oft-quoted image of the wayang shadow puppet-theater, Divine Inspirations: Music and Islam...

Read full description

Indonesia is celebrated for its courtly arts, its beautiful beaches, its tourist attractions, and its artisan marketplace. Yet long overdue is a look at Indonesian Islam as the source of and inspiration for the arts throughout the history of its people, and in the dynamic popular performances of today. From the rhythmic grooves of dangdut, the archipelago's tenacious pop music, to the oft-quoted image of the wayang shadow puppet-theater, Divine Inspirations: Music and Islam in Indonesia investigates the expression of the Muslim religion through a diversity of art forms in this region. And from Quranic recitation by teenaged girls and women in Jakarta to the provincial patronage of Sufi arts and Muslim ritual as regional performance, this volume further addresses the ways in which Islam-inspired performance has been co-opted and appropriated for the expression of national culture. Eleven ethnographic case studies by an international roster of specialists in Indonesian expressive culture and performing arts are complimented by an introduction by co-editors David Harnish and Anne Rasmussen, and an epilogue by senior scholar Judith Becker. The collection explores the region's various micro-cultures of music, dance, religious ritual, government patronage, social censorship, tourism, development, and gender roles and relations. This pastiche speaks on personal, political, global, and local levels to the most important question of identity and ideology in Indonesia today: Islam. Divine Inspirations will engage readers interested in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Islam, world religions, global discourse, and music, arts and ritual.

Similar Books