Horse-head Fiddle and the Cosmopolitan Reimagination of Tradition in Mongolia

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A01=Peter K. Marsh
Author_Peter K. Marsh
Bowed Lute
Category=AVLA
CHINGGIS KHAN
culture
ddles
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_music
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethnomusicology
Fi Ddle
Fiddle Makers
Fiddle Players
folk instrument evolution
Horse Head Fi Ddle
Horsehead Fi Ddle
Khalkha Mongols
making
mongolian
Mongolian Composers
Mongolian cultural identity
Mongolian Musical
Mongolian People
Mongolian Peoples Republic
Mongolian Scholars
Mongolian Society
Mongolian Traditional Musicians
Morin Khuur
MPRP
musical
Naadam Festivals
national
national music modernization
National Musical Culture
party
peoples
players
Prokofi Ev
revolutionary
Soviet influence on music
Tibetan Buddhist Institutions
Tibetan Medicine
traditional performance practice
transformation of Mongolian musical heritage
Tsagaan Sar
Wooden Bridges
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138820807
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Few other nations have undergone as profound a change in their social, political, and cultural life as Mongolia did in the twentieth century. Beginning the century as a largely rural, nomadic, and tradition-oriented society, the nation was transformed by the end of this century into a largely urban, post-industrial, and cosmopolitan one. This study seeks to understand the effects that Western-inspired modernity has had on the nature of cultural tradition in the country, focusing in particular on development of the morin khuur or "horse-head fiddle," a two-stringed bowed folk lute that features a horse’s head carved into its crown. As well as being one of the most popular instruments in the contemporary national musical culture, it has also become an icon of Mongolian national identity and a symbol of the nation’s ancient cultural heritage. In its modern form, however, the horse-head fiddle reflects the values of a modern, cosmopolitan society that put it profoundly at odds with those of the traditional society. In so doing, it also reflects the cosmopolitan nature of the nation’s contemporary national musical culture.

Peter K. Marsh is Assistant Professor of Music at California State University, East Bay. He has written extensively on issues related to musical tradition and modernity in Mongolia, including "Global Hip-Hop and Youth Cultural Politics in Urban Mongolia," in Mongolian Culture and Society in the Age of Globalization, edited by Henry G. Schwarz (Bellingham: Western Washington University Press, 2006).

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