Liburutegia - Fitxa ikusi   Atal honi buruz gehiago jakiteko

The value of a voice : culture and critique in kazakh aitys poetry

Dokumentua: Ingelesa. Online
Egilea(k)
Dubuisson, Eva-Marie
Izenburua
The value of a voice : culture and critique in kazakh aitys poetry / by Eva-Marie Dubuisson
Argitalpena
2009
Gaiak
Aytïs
Edukia
Testu osoa
Beste egileak
University of Michigan
Informazio formatua
Dokumentua
Oharrak
Michiganeko Unibertsitateko gradu amaierako lana
Azalean: A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Anthropology) in The University of Michigan, 2009
Bibliografia: 187-198 or.
What does it mean for a "people" to have a potential voice in a political environment of authoritarian repression? Here I look specifically at the cultural production and performance of improvisational poetry as a form of "folklore" within the context of retraditionalization in a post-Soviet nationalist project in Central Asia. The model of culture presupposed in that context is of an ethnoterritorial and linguistic whole, and I show how contemporary projects transform what was defined as the culture of a Soviet nationality into the cultural face of a nation. However in an environment where an ethnic nationalist model clashes with an internationalist model of the state, there is contestation over what "culture" itself is or should be, and the people who are seen to be part of it. The poetic form aitys is a particularly interesting lens into cultural production and politics because, in live and televised performances across the country, Kazakh aitys poets claim to "voice the truth of the people.?" That "voice" is one of cultural unity but also critically, of (at times quite pointed) sociopolitical critique. Poets are legitimated as culture bearers, able to connect Kazakh ancestors to contemporary audiences, because their language is ideologized as richly historical, as exemplary. From behind the veil of "folklore" as apolitical culture, poets capitalize upon the dialogic conditions of performance to embed criticism of current government officials in anti-Soviet nationalist rhetoric by using language itself as a primary metaphor for the needs of "the people." The success of this form of poetry relies on the pragmatic and dialogic collaboration of a wide variety of participants: poets and audiences, cultural organizers, and elite sponsors. But because among them there are competing visions of how the "voice" of aitys might be harnessed, of who that voice should represent, there is always a threat that creativity and critique in performance will be muted, in particular by overzealous sponsors. This dissertation shows how, due to the complexities of cultural production in a fractured and censorial political environment, the "voice of the people" exists in perpetual jeopardy.
Dedication ...II
Acknowledgements ...III
List of imagines VIII
Chapter one: Poetics and politics ...1
Chapter two: Cultural production ...30
Chapter three: learning, legitimacy and lenguage ideology ...62
Chapter four: The politics of culture in performance ...97
Chapter five: The threat od sponsoship ...129
Chapter six: Voice and voicelessness ...164
Appendix: Anote on translation ...185
References cited ...187

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